4.6 Article

Third Parties' Reactions to the Abusive Supervision of Coworkers

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 100, Issue 4, Pages 1040-1055

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/apl0000002

Keywords

abusive supervision; exclusion beliefs; supervisor-directed deviance; coworker support; coworker exclusion

Funding

  1. Terry-Sanford research grant from the Terry College of Business, University of Georgia

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This research examines 3rd parties' reactions to the abusive supervision of a coworker. Reactions were theorized to depend on 3rd parties' beliefs about the targeted coworker and, specifically, whether the target of abuse was considered deserving of mistreatment. We predicted that 3rd parties would experience anger when targets of abuse were considered undeserving of mistreatment; angered 3rd parties would then be motivated to harm the abusive supervisor and support the targeted coworker. Conversely, we predicted that 3rd parties would experience contentment when targets of abuse were considered deserving of mistreatment; contented 3rd parties would then be motivated to exclude the targeted coworker. Additionally, we predicted that 3rd parties' moral identity would moderate the effects of 3rd parties' experienced emotions on their behavioral reactions, such that a strong moral identity would strengthen ethical behavior (i.e., coworker support) and weaken harmful behavior (i.e., supervisor-directed deviance, coworker exclusion). Moderated mediation results supported the predictions. Implications for theory and practice are discussed.

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