领导风格作为自报和观察到的职场欺凌的预测因素

Leadership Styles as Predictors of Self‐reported and Observed Workplace Bullying

BRITISH JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT · 2009
被引 302
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

基于5288名英国员工的数据,研究发现非权变惩罚是自报欺凌的最强预测因素,而专制领导是观察到的欺凌的最强预测因素,放任型领导对两者均有预测作用。

Abstract

The connection between leadership or management style, on the one hand, and perceptions of bullying, on the other, has received little attention within bullying research. Hence, the aim of this study is to examine the relationship between subordinates' ratings of their immediate superiors' behaviours, and both perceived exposure and claims of observations of bullying at work. Based on a sampling process which emphasized randomness and representativeness, the responses from 5288 respondents in Great Britain taking part in a nationwide study on psychosocial issues at work were included in the analysis. Bullying correlated with all four leadership styles measured. Yet, ‘non‐contingent punishment’ emerged as the strongest predictor of self‐perceived exposure to bullying, while autocratic leadership was the strongest predictor of observed bullying. Hence, while observers particularly associate bullying with autocratic or tyrannical leader behaviour, targets relate bullying more to non‐contingent punishment, i.e. an unpredictable style of leadership, where punishment is meted out or delivered on leaders' own terms, independent of the behaviour of subordinates. In addition, laissez‐faire leadership emerged as a predictor of self‐reported as well as observed bullying. Thus, leadership styles seem to play an important but complex role in the bullying process.

职场欺凌领导风格组织心理学工作场所行为