Abstract

Workplace bullying consists of repeated, long-term exposure to a variety of negative behaviors. However, it remains unclear when behaviors are seen as morally acceptable vs. become bullying. Moral judgments affect whether third parties deem it necessary to intervene. In this qualitative study, we first conceptualize and then explore via 27 interviews with Austrian HR professionals and employee representatives whether twelve diverse negative behaviors elicit distinct causal attributions and moral judgments. In particular, we examine how a perpetrator’s hierarchical position and gender shape the third parties’ evaluations. A qualitative content analysis reveals the behaviors vary in their perceived acceptability and associations with workplace bullying. Ambiguous behaviors require specific cues such a perpetrator’s malicious intent to be labeled workplace bullying. Overall, third parties judge behaviors by supervisors more harshly, particularly when managerial role expectations are violated. The majority of informants reject the notion that their perceptions are affected by perpetrator gender. Still, women who engage in behaviors associated with anger or a lack of empathy are often perceived as acting with intent. The findings suggest that the violation of social role expectations amplifies the attribution of dispositional causes (e.g., malicious intent). We discuss the relevance of perpetrator intent for research and practice.

Highlights

  • Researchers usually measure exposure to the phenomenon of workplace bullying via behavioral checklists

  • The findings suggest that the violation of social role expectations amplifies the attribution of dispositional causes

  • We explore via a qualitative content analysis how informants arrive at their moral judgments and how their attributions and the social role affected the labeling of a behavior as “acceptable”

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Summary

Introduction

Researchers usually measure exposure to the phenomenon of workplace bullying via behavioral checklists. Particular work-related behaviors like persistent criticism are often considered legitimate managerial practices by HR professionals [3,4], i.e., they are not attributed to a malicious perpetrator intent. It remains under-researched how the hierarchical status of a perpetrator (e.g., supervisor vs peer) “normalizes” or aggravates third-party evaluations of (ambiguous) behaviors. There is a lack of conceptual and empirical studies which investigate how other social roles such as gender may affect third parties’ attributions and labeling of negative behaviors as acceptable vs workplace bullying. We propose that highly anti-communal behaviors such as physical violence or screaming will be interpreted more negatively when performed by female perpetrators since the behaviors disconfirm gender stereotypes

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