Other

Aggression, bullying, and mobbing in the workplace: An autoethnographic exploration


Research Areas

Currently no objects available


Publication Details

Author list: Marobela M, Pheko M, Tauetsile J, Seleke T

Edition name or number: 1st Edition

Publication year: 2020

Title of series: The Routledge International Handbook of Organizational Autoethnography

eISSN: 9780429056987



This chapter focuses on how autoethnographies have, and can be used to understand and offer interventions for the forms of aggressive behaviors in organizations. Autoethnographies are powerful approaches as they provide unique perspectives, while also strengthening scholarship by presenting the voice of the voiceless victims of workplace aggression. Generally, targets and victims of workplace aggression, bullying or mobbing have reported being targets of emotional, psychological, or physical injurious actions by another organizational member (i.e., a perpetrator) with whom the target has an ongoing work-related relationship. Workplace bullying and mobbing have been conceptualized as types of psychological violence, both in their nature and impact. Mobbing is related to workplace bullying. However, it is important to caution about the lack of definitional clarity pertaining to what exactly ‘workplace bullying and/or mobbing’ are, and understanding their relationships, how they manifest, their antecedents, predictors, correlates, moderators, and mediators.


Projects

Currently no objects available


Keywords

Currently no objects available


Documents

Currently no objects available


Last updated on 2024-08-10 at 20:13