Acceptability of workplace bullying: A comparative study on six continents

  • J. L. Powers
  • , C. M. Brotheridge
  • , J. Blenkinsopp
  • , L. Bowes-Sperry
  • , N. Bozionelos
  • , Z. Buzady
  • , A. Chuang
  • , D. Drnevich
  • , A. Garzon-Vico
  • , C. Leighton
  • , S. M. Madero
  • , W. Mak
  • , R. Mathew
  • , S. I. Monserrat
  • , Bahaudin Mujtaba
  • , M. R. Olivas-Lujan
  • , P. Polychroniou
  • , C. A. Sprigg
  • , C. Axtell
  • , D. Holman
  • J. A. Ruiz-Gutierrez, A.U. Obiajulu Nnedum

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    This paper is the first to explore the impact of culture on the acceptability of workplace bullying and to do so across a wide range of countries. Physically intimidating bullying is less acceptable than work related bullying both within groups of similar cultures and globally. Cultures with high performance orientation find bullying to be more acceptable while those with high future orientation find bullying to be less acceptable. A high humane orientation is associated with finding work related bullying to be less acceptable. Confucian Asia finds work-related bullying to be more acceptable than the Anglo, Latin America, and Sub-Saharan Africa country clusters and finds physically intimidating bullying to be more acceptable than the Anglo and Latin America country clusters. The differences in the acceptability of bullying with respect to these cultures are partially explained in terms of cultural dimensions.
    Original languageAmerican English
    Pages (from-to)374-380
    Number of pages7
    JournalJournal of Business Research
    Volume66
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Mar 2013

    ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

    • Marketing

    Keywords

    • Cross-cultural differences
    • Future orientation
    • Humane orientation
    • Performance orientation
    • Workplace bullying

    Disciplines

    • Business

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