Each article in this collection of readings has been carefully chosen for its tremendous impact on the field of organizational behavior. It focuses specifically on micro-organizational behavior, which has almost uniquely been influenced by social psychology. The reader is carefully structured into sections which reflect a progression through widening levels of analysis: the science of organizational behavior; decision making; negotiation and social dilemmas; groups and teams; procedural justice; relationships and trust; and values, norms and politics. This volume is in an attractive, user-friendly format and will make excellent supplementary reading to courses in social psychology, industrial and organizational psychology, and business. <p><strong>Preface: Doctoral Education and Teaching in OB.</strong> Organizational Behavior: A Micro Perspective. Part 1:<strong> The</strong><strong>Science and Metaphor of Micro OB.</strong><em>B.M. Staw,</em> Dressing Up Like an Organization: When Psychological Theories can Explain Organizational Action.<em> R.I. Sutton, B.M. Staw,</em> What Theory is Not. <em>J. Pfeffer,</em> Barriers to the Advance of Organizational Science: Paradigm Development as a Dependent Variable. Part 2: <strong>Decision Making.</strong><em>B.M. Staw,</em> Knee-Deep in the Big Muddy: A Study of Escalating Commitment to a Chosen Course of Action. <em>D. Kahneman, D.</em><em>Lovallo,</em> Timid Choices and Bold Forecasts: A Cognitive Perspective on Risk Taking. <em>R.M. Dawes,</em> The Robust Beauty of Improper Linear Models in Decision Making. <em>D.</em><em>Kahneman, J.L. Knetsch, R.H. Thaler,</em> Experimental Tests of the Endowment Effect and the Coase Theorem. <em>G.F.</em><em>Loewenstein, L. Thompson, M.H. Bazerman,</em> Social Utility and Decision Making in Interpersonal Contexts. Part 3:<strong>Negotiation and Social Dilemmas.</strong><em>M.H. Bazerman, T.</em><em>Magliozzi, M.A. Neale,</em> Integrative Bargaining in a Competitive Market. <em>M.W. Morris, R.P. Larrick, S.K. Su,</em> Misperceiving Negotiation Counterparts: When Situationally Determined Bargaining Behaviors are Attributed to Personality Traits. <em>L. Thompson, D.</em><em>Gentner, J. Loewenstein,</em> Avoiding Missed Opportunities in Managerial Life: Analogical Training More Powerful than Individual Case Training. <em>M.B. Brewer, R.M. Kramer,</em> Choice Behavior in Social Dilemmas: Effects of Social Identity, Group Size and Decision Framing. Part 4: <strong>Groups</strong><strong>and Teams.</strong><em>P.B. Paulus, M.T. Dzindolet,</em> Social Influence Processes in Group Brainstorming. <em>D.W. Liang, R.</em><em>Moreland, L. Argote,</em> Group versus Individual Training and Group Performance: The Mediating Role of Transactive Memory. <em>D. Gigone, R. Hastie,</em> The Common Knowledge Effect: Information Sharing and Group Judgment. <em>K.A.</em><em>Jehn, P.P. Shah,</em> Interpersonal Relationships and Task Performance: An Examination of Mediating Processes in Friendship and Acquaintance Groups. Part 5: <strong>Procedural</strong><strong>Justice.</strong><em>E.A. Ling, R. Kanfer, P.C. Earley,</em> Voice, Control and Procedural Justice: Instrumental and Noninstrumental Concerns in Fairness Judgments. <em>T.R.</em><em>Tyler,</em> The Psychology of Procedural Justice: A Test of the Group-Value Model. <em>J. Greenberg,</em> Stealing in the Name of Justice: Informational and Interpersonal Moderators of Theft Reactions to Underpayment Inequity. Part 6: <strong>Relationships and Trust.</strong><em>A. Tesser, M. Millar, J. Moore,</em> Some Affective Consequences of Social Comparison and Reflection Processes: The Pain and Pleasure of Being Close. <em>D.J. McAllister,</em> Affect- and Cognition-based Trust as Foundations for Interpersonal Cooperation in Organizations. <em>D. Krackhardt,</em> Assessing the Political Landscape: Structure, Cognition and Power in Organizations. Part 7:<strong> Values, Norms and Politics.</strong><em>S.</em><em>Kerr,</em> On the Folly of Rewarding A, While Hoping for B. <em>P.E. Tetlock,</em> Cognitive Biases and Organizational Correctives: Do Both Disease and Cure Depend on the Politics of the Beholder? <em>D.T. Miller,</em> The Norm of Self-Interest.</p>