Aggressions and associations: How workplace violence affects what public employees think of citizens

被引:3
作者
Liegat, Marlen C. C. [1 ]
Hensel, David [1 ]
Vogel, Dominik [1 ]
Vogel, Rick [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hamburg, Dept Socioecon, Hamburg, Germany
[2] Univ Hamburg, Fac Business Econ & Social Sci, Dept Socioecon, Von Melle Pk 9, D-20146 Melle, Hamburg, Germany
关键词
GENDER; ENCOUNTERS; STEREOTYPES; INCIVILITY; ATTITUDES; BEHAVIOR; CLIENTS;
D O I
10.1111/padm.12909
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
Scholars have recently spent growing attention to what public employees think of citizens, which influences policy implementation through more manifest attitudes and behaviors. The origins of employees' positive and negative associations with citizens have, however, not been examined thus far. This study draws attention to workplace aggression as critical incidents in state-citizen encounters and examines the traces they leave in employees' subsequent thinking about citizens. Building on social cognition and affective events theory, we hypothesize that the more severe the aggressive incidents have been, the more negative employees' associations with citizens become. Results of a free association task confirm this assumption. Type of work and the gender of the employees moderate the relationship between aggressions and associations. The findings raise awareness for the significance of workplace aggression and provide an outline and agenda of a socio-cognitive theory of public employees' associative thinking about citizens.
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页码:222 / 248
页数:27
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