肮脏工作与更肮脏的工作:应对身体、社会和道德污名的差异

Dirty Work and Dirtier Work: Differences in Countering Physical, Social, and Moral Stigma

MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION REVIEW · 2013
被引 280 · 同刊同年前 2%
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

研究了身体、社会和道德三类肮脏工作的差异,重点分析道德肮脏工作从业者如何应对更严重的身份威胁,提出更细致的理论框架。

Abstract

The literature on dirty work has focused on what physically (e.g., garbage collectors), socially (e.g., addiction counsellors), and morally (e.g., exotic dancers) stigmatized occupations have in common, implying that dirty work is a relatively monolithic construct. In this article, we focus on the differences between these three forms of dirty work and how occupational members collectively attempt to counter the particular stigma associated with each. We argue that the largest differences are between moral dirty work and the other two forms; if physical and social dirty work tend to be seen as more necessary than evil, then moral dirty work tends to be seen as more evil than necessary. Moral dirty work typically constitutes a graver identity threat to occupational members, fostering greater entitativity (a sense of being a distinct group), a greater reliance on members as social buffers, and a greater use of condemning condemners and organization-level defensive tactics. We develop a series of propositions to formalize our arguments and suggest how this more nuanced approach to studying dirty work can stimulate and inform future research.

组织行为学职业社会学污名研究社会心理学