“It’s Not Us, It’s You!”: Extending Managerial Control through Coercion and Internalisation in the Context of Workplace Bullying amongst Nurses in Ireland

Author:

McMahon JulietORCID,O’Sullivan Michelle,MacCurtain Sarah,Murphy Caroline,Ryan Lorraine

Abstract

This article investigates why workers submit to managerial bullying and, in doing so, we extend the growing research on managerial control and workplace bullying. We employ a labour process lens to explore the rationality of management both engaging in and perpetuating bullying. Labour process theory posits that employee submission to workplace bullying can be a valuable method of managerial control and this article examines this assertion. Based on the qualitative feedback in a large-scale survey of nurses in Ireland, we find that management reframed bullying complaints as deficiencies in the competency and citizenship of employees. Such reframing took place at various critical junctures such as when employees resisted extremely pressurized environments and when they resisted bullying behaviours. We find that such reframing succeeds in suppressing resistance and elicits compliance in achieving organisational objectives. We demonstrate how a pervasive bullying culture oriented towards expanding management control weakens an ethical climate conducive to collegiality and the exercise of voice, and strengthens a more instrumental climate. Whilst such a climate can have negative outcomes for individuals, it may achieve desired organisational outcomes for management.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Social Sciences

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Workplace Bullying and Harassment in Higher Education Institutions: A Scoping Review;International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health;2024-09-03

2. Managing workplace bullying and harassment in the Canadian work context: same old, same old;Employee Relations: The International Journal;2024-05-29

3. Bad behavior in healthcare: an insidious threat to patients, staff, and organizations;Current Opinion in Cardiology;2024-03-21

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