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Blame it on the supervisor or the subordinate? Reciprocal relations between abusive supervision and organizational deviance.
J Appl Psychol. 2014 Jul; 99(4):651-64.JA

Abstract

Drawing on various theoretical perspectives, extant research has primarily treated subordinate organizational deviance as a consequence of abusive supervision. Yet, social interaction theories of aggression and victimization perspectives provide support for the opposite ordering, suggesting that subordinate organizational deviance may be an antecedent of abusive supervision. By using a cross-lagged panel design, we empirically test the potentially reciprocal relation between abusive supervision and subordinate organizational deviance. In Study 1, we measured both abusive supervision and organizational deviance at 2 separate times with a 20-month lag between measurement occasions and found evidence that subordinate organizational deviance leads to abusive supervision, but not vice versa. In Study 2, with a shorter time lag (i.e., 6 months), the reciprocal effects of abusive supervision and organizational deviance were supported. Furthermore, we found that the effects of abusive supervision on organizational deviance were moderated by subordinate self-control capacity and intention to quit such that the effects were only significant when subordinates had low self-control capacity and high intention to quit. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Management, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.Smeal College of Business, The Pennsylvania State University.Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo.Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

24377392

Citation

Lian, Huiwen, et al. "Blame It On the Supervisor or the Subordinate? Reciprocal Relations Between Abusive Supervision and Organizational Deviance." The Journal of Applied Psychology, vol. 99, no. 4, 2014, pp. 651-64.
Lian H, Ferris DL, Morrison R, et al. Blame it on the supervisor or the subordinate? Reciprocal relations between abusive supervision and organizational deviance. J Appl Psychol. 2014;99(4):651-64.
Lian, H., Ferris, D. L., Morrison, R., & Brown, D. J. (2014). Blame it on the supervisor or the subordinate? Reciprocal relations between abusive supervision and organizational deviance. The Journal of Applied Psychology, 99(4), 651-64. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0035498
Lian H, et al. Blame It On the Supervisor or the Subordinate? Reciprocal Relations Between Abusive Supervision and Organizational Deviance. J Appl Psychol. 2014;99(4):651-64. PubMed PMID: 24377392.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Blame it on the supervisor or the subordinate? Reciprocal relations between abusive supervision and organizational deviance. AU - Lian,Huiwen, AU - Ferris,D Lance, AU - Morrison,Rachel, AU - Brown,Douglas J, Y1 - 2013/12/30/ PY - 2014/1/1/entrez PY - 2014/1/1/pubmed PY - 2015/9/17/medline SP - 651 EP - 64 JF - The Journal of applied psychology JO - J Appl Psychol VL - 99 IS - 4 N2 - Drawing on various theoretical perspectives, extant research has primarily treated subordinate organizational deviance as a consequence of abusive supervision. Yet, social interaction theories of aggression and victimization perspectives provide support for the opposite ordering, suggesting that subordinate organizational deviance may be an antecedent of abusive supervision. By using a cross-lagged panel design, we empirically test the potentially reciprocal relation between abusive supervision and subordinate organizational deviance. In Study 1, we measured both abusive supervision and organizational deviance at 2 separate times with a 20-month lag between measurement occasions and found evidence that subordinate organizational deviance leads to abusive supervision, but not vice versa. In Study 2, with a shorter time lag (i.e., 6 months), the reciprocal effects of abusive supervision and organizational deviance were supported. Furthermore, we found that the effects of abusive supervision on organizational deviance were moderated by subordinate self-control capacity and intention to quit such that the effects were only significant when subordinates had low self-control capacity and high intention to quit. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed. SN - 1939-1854 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/24377392/Blame_it_on_the_supervisor_or_the_subordinate_Reciprocal_relations_between_abusive_supervision_and_organizational_deviance_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -