The determinants of abusive supervision
International Journal of Conflict Management
ISSN: 1044-4068
Article publication date: 17 October 2023
Abstract
Purpose
On the basis of affective events theory, this study aims to examine the connection between work-related events (i.e. supervisor role ambiguity and role conflicts) and abusive supervision via emotion (i.e. supervisor frustration). This study also examines the moderating role of supervisor personality traits (i.e. neuroticism and conscientiousness).
Design/methodology/approach
This study collected lagged and multisource field data (472 subordinates and supervisors dyads) from the service organizations.
Findings
The data collected supported majority of this study’s hypothesized relationships regarding determinants of abusive supervision.
Practical implications
This study underlines what triggers supervisor abuse. This study also enables organizations with the intervention opportunity to reduce the effects of supervisor role ambiguity, role conflict, negative emotions and personality on triggering abusive supervision.
Originality/value
Prior research on abusive supervision has extensively focused on its outcomes, leaving a noteworthy research gap about what triggers abusive supervision. To fill this important gap in leadership literature, this study proposed and tested a research model of determinants of supervisor abuse. Thus, this study contributes to leadership and abusive supervision research. Implications and future research directions are discussed.
Keywords
Citation
Moin, M.F. and Khan, A.N. (2023), "The determinants of abusive supervision", International Journal of Conflict Management, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCMA-03-2023-0040
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited