The Contribution of organizational factors to workplace bullying, emotional abuse and harassment
Capitolo di libro
Data di Pubblicazione:
2018
Abstract:
This chapter reviews the available international literature on the organizational
antecedents of bullying and harassment by adopting the perspective of the work
environment hypothesis as the main underlying theoretical explanation.
According to this hypothesis, in a poorly organized work environment,
employees experience high levels of stress and frustration, which may lead
them to be involved in interpersonal conflicts, with some of these conflicts
spiralling and evolving into bullying situations. Thus, the work environment
hypothesis conceptualizes bullying as a behavioural strain outcome triggered by
negative working conditions. Research adopting this explanation has grown
considerably in the last decade or so, using progressively more convincing
research designs. The chapter first presents a detailed description of the work
environment hypothesis. It then reviews the main results of the first exploratory
surveys on the role of working conditions in bullying that have consolidated such
a hypothesis and have opened the way to more systematic and robust investigations.
Next, it reports the evidence linking the following specific working conditions
to bullying: job demands and job resources as conceptualized and measured
according to two well-known job stress models (i.e. the demand–control–support
model and the job demands–resources model); leadership characteristics; organizational
change and job insecurity; organizational culture and climate; reward
systems; and physical working conditions. In the concluding section, the main
limitations of the available research will be highlighted and, based on these,
directions for future research will be proposed.
antecedents of bullying and harassment by adopting the perspective of the work
environment hypothesis as the main underlying theoretical explanation.
According to this hypothesis, in a poorly organized work environment,
employees experience high levels of stress and frustration, which may lead
them to be involved in interpersonal conflicts, with some of these conflicts
spiralling and evolving into bullying situations. Thus, the work environment
hypothesis conceptualizes bullying as a behavioural strain outcome triggered by
negative working conditions. Research adopting this explanation has grown
considerably in the last decade or so, using progressively more convincing
research designs. The chapter first presents a detailed description of the work
environment hypothesis. It then reviews the main results of the first exploratory
surveys on the role of working conditions in bullying that have consolidated such
a hypothesis and have opened the way to more systematic and robust investigations.
Next, it reports the evidence linking the following specific working conditions
to bullying: job demands and job resources as conceptualized and measured
according to two well-known job stress models (i.e. the demand–control–support
model and the job demands–resources model); leadership characteristics; organizational
change and job insecurity; organizational culture and climate; reward
systems; and physical working conditions. In the concluding section, the main
limitations of the available research will be highlighted and, based on these,
directions for future research will be proposed.
Tipologia CRIS:
2.1 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
Keywords:
workplace bullying; mobbing; organizational factors; psychosocial risks
Elenco autori:
Balducci, C.; Conway, P.; van Heugten, K.
Link alla scheda completa:
Titolo del libro:
Pathways of Job-related Negative Behaviour