Managing Stakeholder Expectations in a Politically Polarized Society: An Expectation Violation Theory Approach

Authors

  • Aimei Yang Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, University of Southern California, 3502 Watt Way #304, Los Angeles, CA,USA
  • Adam Saffer University of Minnesota—Twin Cities, Hubbard School of Journalism & Mass Communication, 111 Murphy Hall, 206 Church St SE, Minneapolis, MN, USA
  • Yiqi Li Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, University of Southern California, 3502 Watt Way #304, Los Angeles, CA,USA

Keywords:

CSR, social-mediated crisis, stakeholder relationship management, cancel culture

Abstract

In a polarized society, organizations are increasingly forced to take sides on controversial corporate social responsibility (CSR) issues. In recent years organizations have been challenged for their wrongdoings, inactions, or misinterpretations of societal expectations, which have drawn questions about their CSR efforts. The current study draws upon expectation violation theory to examine how stakeholders’ expectations for an organization’s CSR efforts and their observed accountability for those CSR efforts influence two aspects of expectancy violations—violation importance and violation expectedness—while controlling for stakeholders’ perceived reputation of an organization and political ideologies. Survey findings indicate that stakeholders’ perceptions of an organization’s reputation and accountability indeed lead to favorable evaluations of an organization’s crisis response. Furthermore, the effect of stakeholders’ expectations for an organization’s CSR efforts is moderated by stakeholders political ideologies. These findings broaden expectation violation theory to include new variables in the context of CSR efforts that become closely associated with political issues.

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Published

2020-10-12

How to Cite

Aimei Yang, Adam Saffer, & Yiqi Li. (2020). Managing Stakeholder Expectations in a Politically Polarized Society: An Expectation Violation Theory Approach. Journal of International Crisis and Risk Communication Research , 3(2), 275–300. Retrieved from http://jicrcr.com/index.php/jicrcr/article/view/37

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Articles