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Positive Leader Behaviors and Workplace Incivility: the Mediating Role of Perceived Norms for Respect
Authors:Benjamin?M.?Walsh  Junghyun??Lee  Jaclyn?M.?Jensen  Alyssa?K.?McGonagle  Al-Karim?Samnani
Affiliation:1.College of Business and Management,University of Illinois at Springfield,Springfield,USA;2.College of Business, Fairlane Center South,University of Michigan-Dearborn,Dearborn,USA;3.Driehaus College of Business,DePaul University,Chicago,USA;4.Department of Psychology and Organizational Science,University of North Carolina at Charlotte,Charlotte,USA;5.Odette School of Business,University of Windsor,Windsor,Canada
Abstract:Scholars have called for research on the antecedents of mistreatment in organizations such as workplace incivility, as well as the theoretical mechanisms that explain their linkage. To address this call, the present study draws upon social information processing and social cognitive theories to investigate the relationship between positive leader behaviors—those associated with charismatic leadership and ethical leadership—and workers’ experiences of workplace incivility through their perceptions of norms for respect. Relationships were separately examined in two field studies using multi-source data (employees and coworkers in study 1, employees and supervisors in study 2). Results suggest that charismatic leadership (study 1) and ethical leadership (study 2) are negatively related to employee experiences of workplace incivility through employee perceptions of norms for respect. Norms for respect appear to operate as a mediating mechanism through which positive forms of leadership may negatively relate to workplace incivility. The paper concludes with a discussion of implications for organizations regarding leader behaviors that foster norms for respect and curb uncivil behaviors at work.
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