000 01598nam a2200241Ia 4500
008 241010s2006 xx 000 0 und d
040 _cManila Tytana Colleges
100 _aBen-Ari, Rachel.
_914227
245 0 _aProcedural justice, stress appraisal, and athletes' attitudes /
_cRachel Ben-Ari, Yishay Tsur, Dov Har-Even
260 _cFebruary 2006
336 _atext
337 _avolume
338 _aunmediated
440 _n13 : 1, pages 23-44
_aInternational Journal of Stress Management
_914228
520 _aIn this study the authors examined a model in which procedural justice may serve as an external-situational resource that improves athletes' appraisals of stress and enhances their attitudes toward their team. Eighty-one Israeli male athletes were questioned on the degree of procedural justice employed on their team, how they appraised stress, and their attitudes toward their team. Results showed that higher procedural justice was associated with more positive appraisals of stress as a challenge and greater team loyalty and commitment and that the relationship of procedural justice to team commitment and loyalty was mediated by how stress is appraised. Findings integrate the cognitive-phenomenological model of stress/coping with the relational factors of the procedural justice approach and extend their validity to the field of sport.
521 _aPsychology.
650 _aProcedural justice.
_914229
650 _aSports psychology.
_914230
650 _aStress.
_93611
650 _aTeam commitment.
_914231
650 _aTeam loyalty.
_914232
942 _cA
999 _c86888
_d86888