Abstract:
The current imperative is to encourage employees to behave innovatively at work. Prior research has documented the influence of organizational justice on innovative work practices. However, the majority of this research comes from the context of information technology. Moreover, the underlying mechanism linking these variables, namely, the role of knowledge sharing, is sparse. This paper aims to examine the mediating role of knowledge sharing in the relationship between organizational justice and innovative work behavior and to address the problem of a lack of innovation among executive employees of the selected Sri Lankan construction company. The study was conducted by using a simple random sample from a construction company, and the time horizon was cross-sectional. Individual-level was the unit of analysis. Employees who were at the executive level were included as respondents in this survey. After reliability and validity were confirmed, the study's measurements were of a high caliber. The executives of a construction company are surveyed using a questionnaire survey method. A total of 118 valid questionnaires are collected. The hypotheses were examined using Pearson's correlation coefficient and linear regression analysis According to the study, organizational justice significantly influences how creatively employees behave at work. Additionally, it has been discovered that knowledge-sharing mediates the relationship. This paper is only intended for the executive employees of a particular Sri Lankan construction firm. Future researchers will be able to acquire data from various sources, mixing experimental settings with real-world circumstances, strengthening the scientific quality of research methodologies and raising the credibility of research findings. This study emphasizes knowledge-sharing as an underlying mechanism to demystify the relationship between organizational justice and innovative work behavior. An improvement is made to the theoretical framework that now describes the results of organizational justice.