We use insights into the social dynamics of state paranoia to better understand and explain the evolution and effects of perceived abusive supervision. Within our framework, abusive supervision and employee state par anoia are reciprocally related. We explain how perceived abusive supervision can influence paranoid arousal (characterized by extreme distrust, a sense of threat, anxiety and fear of one’s supervisor) and paranoid cognition (characterized by hypervigilance, rumination, and sinister attribution tendencies), and has attendant implications for employee behavior. We also identify an intra-personal mechanism of cognitive bias (e.g., sinister attribution tendencies, interpretive bias), and an inter-personal process of victi...
The authors examined the relationship between subordinates ’ core self-evaluations and supervisors ’...
Purpose The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of psychological empowerment on the rel...
The purpose of this study was to examine an individual difference (i.e., psychological resilience) c...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Two studies (a cross-sectional survey of 90 U.K. workers and an experiment with 100 U.K. workers) ex...
Two studies (a cross-sectional survey of 90 UK workers and an experiment with 100 UK workers) examin...
The aim of this study is to provide the management of private schools an insight into the complexity...
Abusive supervision refers to an employee’s perceptions of negative interactions with one’s supervis...
Abusive supervision has been found to negatively impact employees. Extant literature based on the So...
Previous research has focused on the consequences of abusive supervision and the effects of moderato...
This study examined abusive supervision as a predictor of workplace deviance (organizational, interp...
Much of the abusive supervision research has focused on the supervisor– subordinate dyad when examin...
Drawing on appraisal theories of discrete emotions, we propose and test a model in which abusive sup...
Since the emergence and identification of the phenomenon of abusive supervision, most research has e...
How and when does followers’ upward hostile behavior contribute to the emergence of abusive supervis...
The authors examined the relationship between subordinates ’ core self-evaluations and supervisors ’...
Purpose The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of psychological empowerment on the rel...
The purpose of this study was to examine an individual difference (i.e., psychological resilience) c...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final ...
Two studies (a cross-sectional survey of 90 U.K. workers and an experiment with 100 U.K. workers) ex...
Two studies (a cross-sectional survey of 90 UK workers and an experiment with 100 UK workers) examin...
The aim of this study is to provide the management of private schools an insight into the complexity...
Abusive supervision refers to an employee’s perceptions of negative interactions with one’s supervis...
Abusive supervision has been found to negatively impact employees. Extant literature based on the So...
Previous research has focused on the consequences of abusive supervision and the effects of moderato...
This study examined abusive supervision as a predictor of workplace deviance (organizational, interp...
Much of the abusive supervision research has focused on the supervisor– subordinate dyad when examin...
Drawing on appraisal theories of discrete emotions, we propose and test a model in which abusive sup...
Since the emergence and identification of the phenomenon of abusive supervision, most research has e...
How and when does followers’ upward hostile behavior contribute to the emergence of abusive supervis...
The authors examined the relationship between subordinates ’ core self-evaluations and supervisors ’...
Purpose The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of psychological empowerment on the rel...
The purpose of this study was to examine an individual difference (i.e., psychological resilience) c...