Beyond Bullying, Aggression, Discrimination, and Social Safety: Development of an Integrated Negative Work Behavior Questionnaire (INWBQ)

Author:

Verschuren Cokkie1,Tims Maria1,De Lange Annet H.23456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Management and Organization, School of Business and Economics, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. The Faculty of Psychology, Open University, 6419 AT Heerlen, The Netherlands

3. The Department of Psychology, Universidade da Coruna, 15701 A Coruña, Spain

4. The Faculty of Psychology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), 7491 Trondheim, Norway

5. Norwegian School of Hotel Management, University of Stavanger, 4021 Stavanger, Norway

6. Department of Human Resource Studies, Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Tilburg University, 5037 AB Tilburg, The Netherlands

Abstract

Negative work behavior (NWB) threatens employee well-being. There are numerous constructs that reflect NWBs, such as bullying, aggression, and discrimination, and they are often examined in isolation from each other, limiting scientific integration of these studies. We aim to contribute to this research field by developing a diagnostic tool with content validity on the full spectrum of NWBs. First, we provide a full description of how we tapped and organized content from 44 existing NWB measurement instruments and 48 studies. Second, we discussed our results with three experts in this research field to check for missing studies and to discuss our integration results. This two-stage process yielded a questionnaire measuring physical, material, psychological, sociocultural, and digital NWB. Furthermore, the questions include a range of potential actors of NWB, namely, internal (employees, managers) and external actors (clients, customers, public, and family members) at work and their roles (i.e., target, perpetrator, perpetrator’s assistant, target’s defender, outsider, and witness of NWBs). Finally, the questionnaire measures what type of harm is experienced (i.e., bodily, material, mental, and social harm).

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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