“ . . . A Bit of a Joke”: Policy and Workplace Bullying

Workplace bullying is pervasive and has negative impacts on organizations and their employees. Despite this, organizations generally do not deal well with the problem. Anti-bullying, or Dignity-at-Work policies, do not adequately protect employees from the harms caused by bullying. This study, based...

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Main Authors: Margaret Hodgins, Duncan Lewis, Sarah MacCurtain, Patricia McNamara, Victoria Hogan, Lisa Pursell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-06-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020934493
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spelling doaj-f6717359810e4ac19cb1d9dc5cac058a2020-11-25T03:01:31ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402020-06-011010.1177/2158244020934493“ . . . A Bit of a Joke”: Policy and Workplace BullyingMargaret Hodgins0Duncan Lewis1Sarah MacCurtain2Patricia McNamara3Victoria Hogan4Lisa Pursell5National University of Ireland Galway, IrelandEdith Cowan University, PerthUniversity of Limerick, IrelandUniversity of Limerick, IrelandNational University of Ireland Galway, IrelandNational University of Ireland Galway, IrelandWorkplace bullying is pervasive and has negative impacts on organizations and their employees. Despite this, organizations generally do not deal well with the problem. Anti-bullying, or Dignity-at-Work policies, do not adequately protect employees from the harms caused by bullying. This study, based on data from the 2018 Irish Workplace Behavior Study, explores experience of organizational responses to workplace bullying, drawing on interviews with participants from three large Irish organizations. One overarching theme and five sub themes emerged from the thematic content analysis, reinforcing earlier findings regarding the complex and problematic nature of workplace bullying and opaque “ownership” of anti-bullying or Dignity-at-Work policy and its implementation. The study concludes that organizations must actively establish a culture of interpersonal respect, rather than simply instituting a policy where ultimately no one takes responsibility. Facilitating employee wellbeing requires social cohesion across an organization.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020934493
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Margaret Hodgins
Duncan Lewis
Sarah MacCurtain
Patricia McNamara
Victoria Hogan
Lisa Pursell
spellingShingle Margaret Hodgins
Duncan Lewis
Sarah MacCurtain
Patricia McNamara
Victoria Hogan
Lisa Pursell
“ . . . A Bit of a Joke”: Policy and Workplace Bullying
SAGE Open
author_facet Margaret Hodgins
Duncan Lewis
Sarah MacCurtain
Patricia McNamara
Victoria Hogan
Lisa Pursell
author_sort Margaret Hodgins
title “ . . . A Bit of a Joke”: Policy and Workplace Bullying
title_short “ . . . A Bit of a Joke”: Policy and Workplace Bullying
title_full “ . . . A Bit of a Joke”: Policy and Workplace Bullying
title_fullStr “ . . . A Bit of a Joke”: Policy and Workplace Bullying
title_full_unstemmed “ . . . A Bit of a Joke”: Policy and Workplace Bullying
title_sort “ . . . a bit of a joke”: policy and workplace bullying
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Workplace bullying is pervasive and has negative impacts on organizations and their employees. Despite this, organizations generally do not deal well with the problem. Anti-bullying, or Dignity-at-Work policies, do not adequately protect employees from the harms caused by bullying. This study, based on data from the 2018 Irish Workplace Behavior Study, explores experience of organizational responses to workplace bullying, drawing on interviews with participants from three large Irish organizations. One overarching theme and five sub themes emerged from the thematic content analysis, reinforcing earlier findings regarding the complex and problematic nature of workplace bullying and opaque “ownership” of anti-bullying or Dignity-at-Work policy and its implementation. The study concludes that organizations must actively establish a culture of interpersonal respect, rather than simply instituting a policy where ultimately no one takes responsibility. Facilitating employee wellbeing requires social cohesion across an organization.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244020934493
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