Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11718/24373
Title: Bystanders in workplace bullying: working university students' perspectives on action versus inaction
Authors: Paull, Megan
Omari, Maryam
D'Cruz, Premilla
Çangarli, Burcu Güneri
Keywords: Bystanders;Helping behaviour;Human resource management;Participant stories;Sexual harassment;Workplace bullying
Issue Date: 8-Feb-2019
Publisher: Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources
Citation: Paull, M., Omari, M., D'Cruz, P., & Güneri Çangarli, B. (2020). Bystanders in workplace bullying: working university students’ perspectives on action versus inaction. Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources, 58(3), 313-334.
Abstract: There is increasing interest in bystanders to workplace bullying, including from human resource management (HRM) perspectives. This paper draws on literature from the fields of sexual harassment and helping behaviour to develop understanding of bystander action and inaction. Part of a project on workplace bullying, this study used online story-based responses from university students in Australia, India and Turkey with workplace experience to elicit bystander and target interpretations of the behaviour. Findings suggest that even when bystanders are aware of bullying, they do not always intervene for reasons ranging from powerlessness and fear to avoidance and ignorance. Helping behaviours, including private support or making a report, were described by some respondents, with contextual factors linked to the perpetrator or the organisation influencing responses. The importance of the HRM role in facilitating bystander action, drawing on the helping behaviour and sexual harassment literature, is a focus of the findings and implications.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11718/24373
Appears in Collections:Journal Articles

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