The effects of project uncertainty on guanxi governance and contractual governance

Purpose This study examines how project uncertainties (environmental uncertainty and participant uncertainty) affect guanxi and contractual governance and assesses the mediating role of guanxi governance between project uncertainty and contractual governance. Design/methodology/approach Data were co...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEngineering, construction, and architectural management
Main Authors Lin, Yi-Hsin, Niu, Deshuang, Guo, Yanzhe, Zeng, Ningshuang
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 13.06.2023
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Summary:Purpose This study examines how project uncertainties (environmental uncertainty and participant uncertainty) affect guanxi and contractual governance and assesses the mediating role of guanxi governance between project uncertainty and contractual governance. Design/methodology/approach Data were collected in two stages from Chinese contractors. First, in-depth interviews were conducted with nine construction engineering project practitioners in different contracts as a pilot for questionnaire designing. Second, a cross-sectional questionnaire survey was conducted with professionals and practitioners of construction enterprises to collect primary data. Partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) was used to test seven hypotheses based on data collected from 198 respondents. Findings Project environmental uncertainty promotes the use of guanxi governance, while project participant uncertainty hinders it; the relationship between both types of uncertainty and contractual governance is the same as with guanxi governance. Furthermore, guanxi governance promotes contractual governance and partially mediates project environmental uncertainty and contractual governance and a complete mediating role between project participant uncertainty and contractual governance. Research limitations/implications As the interviewed samples are mainly from China, the study should be replicated using large representative samples from East Asian countries, such as Japan and South Korea, to gain a more comprehensive understanding of the influence of guanxi governance. Further, while the internal consistency reliability and convergent validity of the questionnaire data in this study align with the standards, a larger sample size would improve the reliability and validity of the research results and better represent the overall work situation of contractors, owners and public policymakers. Originality/value The results provide insights into project governance research and have implications for construction practitioners in deploying governance-related resources.
ISSN:0969-9988
DOI:10.1108/ECAM-08-2022-0773