Deviant Workplace Behaviors in Organizations in Pakistan
Author(s) -
Maimoona Waseem
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
lahore journal of business
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2223-0025
DOI - 10.35536/ljb.2016.v4.i2.a5
Subject(s) - deviance (statistics) , hostility , harassment , psychology , social psychology , organizational culture , norm of reciprocity , injustice , public relations , sociology , political science , social capital , social science , statistics , mathematics
While employees bring their own set of values and attitudes to the workplace, companies that adopt a positive approach toward their employees are likely to be more productive. Employee misbehavior and workplace deviance can have a severe impact on overall organizational performance and productivity, with a corresponding increase in costs. The literature indicates that deviant behaviors include stress, violence, sexual harassment, employee hostility and organizational injustice. This study examines the extent of organizational and interpersonal deviance at a private sector firm in Pakistan, in which a sample of 50 employees were asked to rate deviant workplace behaviors. The independent variables include leader mistreatment, employee hostility, organizational sabotage, intention to quit, and political and production deviance. The study finds a significant relationship between workplace deviance and most of these variables.
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