Do the bullies survive? A five-year, three-wave prospective study of indicators of expulsion in working life among perpetrators of workplace bullying

Industrial Health
Mats GlambekStåle Einarsen

Abstract

In recent series of studies, we have shown that targets of workplace bullying are at risk of expulsion in working life, both from current employment (e.g. in terms of changing employer) and from working life itself (e.g. becoming unemployed). The most recent of these, Take It or Leave: A Five-Year Prospective Study of Workplace Bullying and Indicators of Expulsion in Working Life was recently published in Industrial Health, and the present short communication aims to follow up that paper, investigating the possible job "survival" of the perpetrators. A nationally representative sample was employed (n=1,613), and responses were gathered at three time points with a two-year and a five-year time-lag. Outcomes were intention to leave and sickness absence at T1, and sickness absence, change of employer, disability benefit recipiency and unemployment at T2 and T3. The results of regression analyses clearly indicate that the perpetrators' occupational status is largely unchanged, and remains so over time, as opposed to earlier findings regarding the targets of bullying.

References

Oct 1, 2003·The Journal of Applied Psychology·Philip M PodsakoffNathan P Podsakoff
Oct 23, 2003·Journal of Occupational Health Psychology·Lilia M Cortina, Vicki J Magley

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Citations

Nov 15, 2020·International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health·Åse Marie HansenAnnie Hogh
Nov 16, 2021·Frontiers in Psychology·Cokkie M VerschurenAnnet H de Lange

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