The authors examine manifestations, individual and organizational antecedents and consequences of abusive supervisor behavior which is defined as regular humiliating, suppressive, rude and insulting day-to-day practices towards subordinates. Empirical analysis is based on the online survey of 198 employees from private and public organizations. We found, first, that abusive supervision in Russian organizations is most often manifested in coercion to do routine and unqualified work tasks; ignoring of subordinates’ ideas and initiatives; public critique in an insulting manner; cheating subordinates. Second, our investigation shows that respondents attribute such behavior to demonstration of power or to supervisors’ poor communicative sk...
The moral exclusion literature identifies three previously unexamined predictors of abusive supervis...
We used data collected from a field survey of 334 supervisor–subordinate dyads to test a model of th...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Previous research has focused on the consequences of abusive supervision and the effects of moderato...
Much of the abusive supervision research has focused on the supervisor– subordinate dyad when examin...
Drawing from moral exclusion theory, this article examines outcome dependence and interpersonal liki...
Why do employees who experience abusive supervision retaliate against the organization? We apply org...
Abusive supervision is a serious and growing problem plaguing today’s organizations, affecting up to...
1 online resource (127 pages) : illustrationsIncludes abstract and appendices.Includes bibliographic...
The authors examined the relationship between subordinates ’ core self-evaluations and supervisors ’...
Abusive supervision was traditionally viewed as a unidimensional construct and found detrimental in ...
The authors examined antecedents of abusive supervision and the relative importance of interactional...
Abusive supervision has been found to negatively impact employees. Extant literature based on the So...
Abusive supervision refers to an employee’s perceptions of negative interactions with one’s supervis...
Drawing on resource drain theory, we introduce self-regulatory resource (ego) depletion stemming fro...
The moral exclusion literature identifies three previously unexamined predictors of abusive supervis...
We used data collected from a field survey of 334 supervisor–subordinate dyads to test a model of th...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Previous research has focused on the consequences of abusive supervision and the effects of moderato...
Much of the abusive supervision research has focused on the supervisor– subordinate dyad when examin...
Drawing from moral exclusion theory, this article examines outcome dependence and interpersonal liki...
Why do employees who experience abusive supervision retaliate against the organization? We apply org...
Abusive supervision is a serious and growing problem plaguing today’s organizations, affecting up to...
1 online resource (127 pages) : illustrationsIncludes abstract and appendices.Includes bibliographic...
The authors examined the relationship between subordinates ’ core self-evaluations and supervisors ’...
Abusive supervision was traditionally viewed as a unidimensional construct and found detrimental in ...
The authors examined antecedents of abusive supervision and the relative importance of interactional...
Abusive supervision has been found to negatively impact employees. Extant literature based on the So...
Abusive supervision refers to an employee’s perceptions of negative interactions with one’s supervis...
Drawing on resource drain theory, we introduce self-regulatory resource (ego) depletion stemming fro...
The moral exclusion literature identifies three previously unexamined predictors of abusive supervis...
We used data collected from a field survey of 334 supervisor–subordinate dyads to test a model of th...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...