ISSN 1671-3710
CN 11-4766/R
主办:中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理科学进展 ›› 2026, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (7): 1138-1153.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2026.1138 cstr: 32111.14.2026.1138

• 研究构想 • 上一篇    下一篇

混合雇佣团队合作困境的形成与缓解机制: 权力不对称下的平衡策略

王鹏程1, 彭娟1, 秦传燕2, 刘善仕3   

  1. 1广西大学工商管理学院, 南宁 530004;
    2广东药科大学医药商学院, 广州 510000;
    3华南理工大学工商管理学院, 广州 510641
  • 收稿日期:2025-09-22 出版日期:2026-07-15 发布日期:2026-05-11
  • 通讯作者: 彭娟, E-mail: pengjuan@gxu.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金项目(72562003, 72262004), 教育部人文社会科学研究规划基金项目(24YJC630210), 广西自然科学基金青年科学基金项目C类(2026GXNSFBA00640162), 广西哲学社会科学规划研究基金项目(24GLC006), 广西第一批青苗人才普惠性支持政策资助项目(202402046), 广东省哲学社会科学规划学科共建项目(GD24XGL025)

The formation and mitigation mechanisms of cooperation dilemmas in hybrid employment teams: Balancing strategies under power asymmetry

WANG Pengcheng1, PENG Juan1, QIN Chuanyan2, LIU Shanshi3   

  1. 1School of Business, Guangxi University, Nanning 530004, China;
    2School of Business of Pharmacy, Guangdong Pharmaceutical University, Guangzhou 510000, China;
    3School of Business Administration, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510641, China
  • Received:2025-09-22 Online:2026-07-15 Published:2026-05-11

摘要: 随着组织边界的开放, 混合雇佣团队逐渐成为提升组织灵活性和创新能力的重要模式。然而, 正式工与非正式工之间的权力不对称已成为阻碍团队协作、降低绩效, 甚至导致项目失败的关键因素。现有研究主要聚焦组织层面的治理机制, 而对微观层面的雇佣身份差异及其对团队合作困境的形成机制缺乏深入探讨。本研究基于权力依赖理论, 从正式工—非正式工的互动视角出发, 揭示权力不对称如何在不同层次上重塑合作过程, 在团队层面导致工作设计扭曲(任务结构碎片化、任务内容模糊化、任务环境壁垒化), 并在个体层面引发合作行为异化(正式工主导型控制VS非正式工防御型沉默), 最终加剧团队合作困境。基于“在不对称中构建平衡”的逻辑, 本研究提出多层次系统性缓解机制, 规范权力运作方式并调节成员的权力感知与行为反应, 从而缓解权力不对称在合作过程中的消极影响。研究成果不仅深化了权力不对称对混合雇佣团队合作绩效影响的理论认知, 也为企业优化用工管理、提升协作效能、构建和谐劳动关系提供了实践指导。

关键词: 雇佣关系, 权力不对称, 工作设计扭曲, 合作行为异化, 团队合作困境

Abstract: With the diversification of employment arrangements, hybrid employment teams have become an important organizational form for enhancing flexibility and integrating external resources. However, in practice, such teams do not necessarily realize the expected collaborative advantages; instead, they often encounter cooperation dilemmas, including coordination failures, insufficient knowledge sharing, and declining willingness to cooperate. Existing studies have largely explained these phenomena from the perspectives of institutional arrangements or contractual governance, while paying relatively limited attention to the micro-level collaboration between standard and non-standard employees. Addressing this gap, the present study adopts a power asymmetry perspective to examine the origins and formation mechanisms of cooperation dilemmas in hybrid employment teams and to explore feasible mitigation pathways.
Drawing on power dependence theory, this study develops a multi-level analytical framework to systematically explain the formation and regulation of cooperation dilemmas from the team level, the individual level, and the level of intervention mechanisms. The core argument is that differences in employment status solidify structural power asymmetry, which reshapes task organization, interaction patterns, and psychological experiences, thereby generating cooperation dilemmas. Specifically, the study contains three key components. First, at the team level, structural power asymmetry produces cooperation dilemmas by distorting team work design. Power-advantaged members are more likely to dominate task boundaries and responsibility allocation, causing the task system to deviate from efficiency-oriented principles. This distortion manifests as task structure fragmentation, task content ambiguity, and task environment segmentation, making it difficult for team members to form clear shared responsibility. Coordination increasingly relies on procedures rather than relationships, and collaboration thus shifts from a stable cooperative system to constrained, transactional interaction. Work design distortion therefore serves as a crucial mediating pathway through which power asymmetry intensifies cooperation dilemmas.
Second, at the individual level, the study shows how power asymmetry elicits differentiated behavioral responses across employment groups, thereby reinforcing cooperation dilemmas. For standard employees in power-advantaged positions, asymmetric dependence is more likely to activate dominant control behaviors, including excessive task intervention, restriction of information flows, unilateral decision-making, and boundary setting that favors their own interests. These behaviors may protect positional advantages but suppress mutual adjustment and shared learning. In contrast, for non-standard employees in power-disadvantaged positions, power asymmetry more readily induces defensive silence, reflected in reduced voice behavior, risk avoidance, and lower proactive engagement. Under asymmetric dependence, they are more likely to perceive higher interpersonal and career risks, which weakens psychological safety and the social foundation of cooperation. The dominant control of standard employees and the defensive silence of non-standard employees interact to form a self-reinforcing cycle, making distortions in work design difficult to correct.
Third, in terms of intervention strategies, the study proposes a multi-level regulatory mechanism to mitigate the negative effects of power asymmetry. Structural empowerment and institutional design optimization help reduce power concentration stemming from employment status differences by clarifying authority boundaries, increasing procedural transparency, and strengthening safeguards for fair allocation. Social integration practices reshape team members’ cognitive perceptions of power and dependence, build shared identity, cross-status trust, and cooperative expectations, and weaken purely instrumental interaction. At the individual level, reducing standard employees’ perceived status threat can curb dominant control tendencies, while enhancing non-standard employees’ contingent self-esteem can reduce defensive silence and promote constructive voice. Working together across levels, these mechanisms transform asymmetric power relations into more functional interdependence, thereby improving cooperation in hybrid employment teams.
By introducing power dependence theory into the context of hybrid employment teams, this study clarifies how structural power asymmetry influences collaboration through work design distortions and behavioral differentiation, extending prior research on teamwork and flexible employment that assumes power balance or emphasizes one-sided adaptation. The model integrates institutional structure, team work design, and individual behavioral responses to provide a more complete micro-level explanation. At the same time, the multi-level mitigation framework offers organizations a systematic path to identify and manage power asymmetry risks, underscoring that effective collaboration requires the joint operation of institutional design and relational integration rather than reliance on contractual control alone. These theoretical insights provide a stronger foundation for future research on the antecedents of power asymmetry, the evolution of cooperation mechanisms, and the boundary conditions of interventions, while offering actionable implications for managers seeking to maintain employment flexibility without sacrificing team cohesion and cooperative performance.

Key words: employment relationship, power asymmetry, distortion of work design, alienation of cooperative behaviors, team cooperation dilemmas

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