Acceptable Behavior or Workplace Bullying?—How Perpetrator Gender and Hierarchical Status Affect Third Parties’ Attributions and Moral Judgments of Negative Behaviors
Workplace bullying consists of repeated, long-term exposure to a variety of negative behaviors. However, it remains unclear when behaviors are seen as morally acceptable vs. become bullying. Moral judgments affect whether third parties deem it necessary to intervene. In this qualitative study, we fi...
Main Authors: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
MDPI AG
2021-06-01
|
Series: | Societies |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/11/2/62 |
id |
doaj-55ce6cb7bf574e059ff5a3d03593ff80 |
---|---|
record_format |
Article |
spelling |
doaj-55ce6cb7bf574e059ff5a3d03593ff802021-07-01T00:17:14ZengMDPI AGSocieties2075-46982021-06-0111626210.3390/soc11020062Acceptable Behavior or Workplace Bullying?—How Perpetrator Gender and Hierarchical Status Affect Third Parties’ Attributions and Moral Judgments of Negative BehaviorsEva Zedlacher0Denise Salin1Department of Business and Management, Webster Vienna Private University, 1020 Vienna, AustriaDepartment of Management and Organization, Hanken School of Economics, 00100 Helsinki, FinlandWorkplace bullying consists of repeated, long-term exposure to a variety of negative behaviors. However, it remains unclear when behaviors are seen as morally acceptable vs. become bullying. Moral judgments affect whether third parties deem it necessary to intervene. In this qualitative study, we first conceptualize and then explore via 27 interviews with Austrian HR professionals and employee representatives whether twelve diverse negative behaviors elicit distinct causal attributions and moral judgments. In particular, we examine how a perpetrator’s hierarchical position and gender shape the third parties’ evaluations. A qualitative content analysis reveals the behaviors vary in their perceived acceptability and associations with workplace bullying. Ambiguous behaviors require specific cues such a perpetrator’s malicious intent to be labeled workplace bullying. Overall, third parties judge behaviors by supervisors more harshly, particularly when managerial role expectations are violated. The majority of informants reject the notion that their perceptions are affected by perpetrator gender. Still, women who engage in behaviors associated with anger or a lack of empathy are often perceived as acting with intent. The findings suggest that the violation of social role expectations amplifies the attribution of dispositional causes (e.g., malicious intent). We discuss the relevance of perpetrator intent for research and practice.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/11/2/62workplace bullyingmoral judgmentsattributions of intentperpetrator statusperpetrator genderethical decision making |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Eva Zedlacher Denise Salin |
spellingShingle |
Eva Zedlacher Denise Salin Acceptable Behavior or Workplace Bullying?—How Perpetrator Gender and Hierarchical Status Affect Third Parties’ Attributions and Moral Judgments of Negative Behaviors Societies workplace bullying moral judgments attributions of intent perpetrator status perpetrator gender ethical decision making |
author_facet |
Eva Zedlacher Denise Salin |
author_sort |
Eva Zedlacher |
title |
Acceptable Behavior or Workplace Bullying?—How Perpetrator Gender and Hierarchical Status Affect Third Parties’ Attributions and Moral Judgments of Negative Behaviors |
title_short |
Acceptable Behavior or Workplace Bullying?—How Perpetrator Gender and Hierarchical Status Affect Third Parties’ Attributions and Moral Judgments of Negative Behaviors |
title_full |
Acceptable Behavior or Workplace Bullying?—How Perpetrator Gender and Hierarchical Status Affect Third Parties’ Attributions and Moral Judgments of Negative Behaviors |
title_fullStr |
Acceptable Behavior or Workplace Bullying?—How Perpetrator Gender and Hierarchical Status Affect Third Parties’ Attributions and Moral Judgments of Negative Behaviors |
title_full_unstemmed |
Acceptable Behavior or Workplace Bullying?—How Perpetrator Gender and Hierarchical Status Affect Third Parties’ Attributions and Moral Judgments of Negative Behaviors |
title_sort |
acceptable behavior or workplace bullying?—how perpetrator gender and hierarchical status affect third parties’ attributions and moral judgments of negative behaviors |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Societies |
issn |
2075-4698 |
publishDate |
2021-06-01 |
description |
Workplace bullying consists of repeated, long-term exposure to a variety of negative behaviors. However, it remains unclear when behaviors are seen as morally acceptable vs. become bullying. Moral judgments affect whether third parties deem it necessary to intervene. In this qualitative study, we first conceptualize and then explore via 27 interviews with Austrian HR professionals and employee representatives whether twelve diverse negative behaviors elicit distinct causal attributions and moral judgments. In particular, we examine how a perpetrator’s hierarchical position and gender shape the third parties’ evaluations. A qualitative content analysis reveals the behaviors vary in their perceived acceptability and associations with workplace bullying. Ambiguous behaviors require specific cues such a perpetrator’s malicious intent to be labeled workplace bullying. Overall, third parties judge behaviors by supervisors more harshly, particularly when managerial role expectations are violated. The majority of informants reject the notion that their perceptions are affected by perpetrator gender. Still, women who engage in behaviors associated with anger or a lack of empathy are often perceived as acting with intent. The findings suggest that the violation of social role expectations amplifies the attribution of dispositional causes (e.g., malicious intent). We discuss the relevance of perpetrator intent for research and practice. |
topic |
workplace bullying moral judgments attributions of intent perpetrator status perpetrator gender ethical decision making |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/11/2/62 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT evazedlacher acceptablebehaviororworkplacebullyinghowperpetratorgenderandhierarchicalstatusaffectthirdpartiesattributionsandmoraljudgmentsofnegativebehaviors AT denisesalin acceptablebehaviororworkplacebullyinghowperpetratorgenderandhierarchicalstatusaffectthirdpartiesattributionsandmoraljudgmentsofnegativebehaviors |
_version_ |
1721349087432802304 |