|
The WBI 2003 Report on Abusive Workplaces
About Perpetrators, the Bullies 1. A different kind of harassment: a.) Women bullies: 58% Men bullies: 42% In only 25% of cases was the target a member of a 'protected status' group and the bully was not. This is the minimal requirement for filing a harassment or discrimination claim based on civil rights violations. In 15% of cases, the bully is the one who was 'protected.' What it could mean: Bullying or 'status-blind' harassment is three times more prevalent its illegal variety, which itself is a subset of the more general variety. See this result-related graphic. b.) Bullying -- unaddressed by state or federal civil rights protections:
Both women and men bully, but women are the primary targets. See this result-related graphic
Woman-on-Woman bullying represents 50% of all workplace bullying See this result-related graphic
Probability for Women targets to be bullied by a Woman bully is 63% What it could mean: Bullying is same-sex harassment, most of the time, and therefore invisible when seen through the lens of anti-discrimination laws. Existing civil rights laws in the U.S., believed by the general public to prohibit harassment, do not apply to same-sex cases (except when unwanted sexual overtures are involved). See this result-related graphic 2. Bully's Rank relative to the target:
Bully has higher rank than target: 71% (men bullies were more top-down, 76%, than were women bullies, 67%) See this result-related graphic 3. Spreading the misery among other targets: Women bullies were more likely to torment more than a single target in the work unit (68%) than were men (63%). 4. Bullies enlist the help of others: a.) Only 23% of bullies chose to do the bullying by themselves; 77% enlisted others to help -- by alternately bullying the target alone (32%) and at other times having help from others (45%). The target's co-workers frequently became the bully's allies (48%). Women bullies recruited co-workers a bit more than did men bullies (53% and 42%, respectively). The majority of bully backers came from the bully's peer group in 28% of cases. Remember that in 71% of cases this would be other managers, at least one level rank above the target. Higher level managers assist in the bullying of targets in 24% of cases. Men bullies tend to rely upon management (57%) supporters as frequently as women bullies enlist the help of the target's co-workers (53%). What it could mean: Men bullies use the organization's hierarchy; women bullies use the social network of peers to accomplish the bullying. b.) Size of the bullying group: Targets report an average of 3.5 people eventually being involved with the bullying. Men bullies and their allies number 3.9 on the average; women bullies and cohorts, 3.2.
What it could mean: The survey results validate WBI's definition of bullying. The phenomenon begins with a single person who then orchestrates the campaign of hate with the help of allies. Thus, the semantic difference between workplace bullying (UK origin & adopted by The Workplace Bullying Institute, and in Australia and New Zealand) vs. "mobbing "(the Scandinavian & EU term) disappears. They are identical phenomena.
The WBI 2003 Report on Abusive Workplaces
Contents | Methodology | About Targeted Individuals | About Bullies Bullies' Tactics| Why Targets Are Bullied | Impact on Target's Health |