监狱中的同情:人类服务工作者何时以及如何克服关怀障碍

Compassion in the Clink: When and How Human Services Workers Overcome Barriers to Care

ORGANIZATION SCIENCE · 2020
被引 15
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

通过对119名美国狱警的多阶段定性研究,发现他们在面对囚犯不当行为时反而常表现出同情,并揭示了通过拉平群体差异和自我情绪屏蔽来克服工作障碍的机制。

Abstract

A key assumption in past literature has been that human services workers become emotionally distant from their charges (such as clients or patients). Such distancing is said to protect workers from the emotionally draining aspects of the job but creates challenges to feeling and behaving compassionately. Because little is known about when and how compassion occurs under these circumstances, we conducted a multiphased qualitative study of 119 correctional officers in the United States using interviews and observations. Officers’ accounts and our observations of their interactions with inmates included cruel, disciplinary, unemotional, and compassionate treatment. Such treatment varied by the situations that officers faced, and compassion was surprisingly common when inmates were misbehaving—challenging current understanding of the occurrence of compassion at work. Examining officers’ accounts more closely, we uncovered a novel way that we theorize human services workers can be compassionate, even under such difficult circumstances. We find that officers describe engaging in practices in which they (a) relate to others by leveling group-based differences between themselves and their charges and (b) engage in self-protection by shielding themselves from the negative emotions triggered by their charges. We posit that the combined use of such practices offsets different emotional tensions in the work, rather than only providing emotional distance, and in doing so, can foster compassionate treatment under some of the most trying situations and organizational barriers to compassion.

组织行为学人力资源管理社会工作心理学