Threats of workplace violence and the buffering effect of social support
Authors / Editors
Research Areas
Publication Details
Output type: Journal article
Author list: van Emmerik JH, Euwema MC, Bakker AB
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Publication year: 2007
Journal: Group and Organization Management (1059-6011)
Volume number: 32
Issue number: 2
Start page: 152
End page: 175
Number of pages: 24
ISSN: 1059-6011
eISSN: 1552-3993
Languages: English-Great Britain (EN-GB)
Unpaywall Data
Open access status: closed
Abstract
Based on the perspective of the psychological contract, this study among 2,782 constabulary officers tested the hypothesis that threats of workplace violence lead to reduced job investments (i.e., affective organizational commitment and dedication). Multilevel analyses showed negative relationships between threats of workplace violence (individually experienced and as expressed in an unsafe climate) and job investments. Peer support was related to more job investments and buffered an unsafe climate, that is, the negative relationship between an unsafe climate and reduced job investments was stronger for employees with low levels of peer support. Experiencing an unsafe climate at the aggregate level by the cumulative experience of threat by employees can perhaps be thought of as facing a common enemy, and it has been shown that this has consequences for employees' attitudes that can be buffered by peer support.
Keywords
psychological contract, social support, workplace violence
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