4.6 Article

Employees' Behavioral Reactions to Supervisor Aggression: An Examination of Individual and Situational Factors

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 6, Pages 1148-1170

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0029452

Keywords

abusive supervision; aggression; retaliation; displaced aggression; problem solving

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This research examines employees' behavioral reactions to perceived supervisor aggression. The goal is to understand what makes employees react constructively or destructively to aggression. Three types of behavioral reactions are investigated: retaliation, coworker displaced aggression, and problem solving. We suggest employee reactions are influenced by individual and situational characteristics. We test these ideas by examining the moderating effects of 1 individual factor (locus of control) and 2 situational factors (fear of retaliation and behavioral modeling) on the relationships between perceived supervisor aggression and employee behaviors. The results of an experiment and 2 field studies provide support for the predictions and some unexpected findings. Implications for understanding reactions to perceived supervisor aggression are presented.

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