Publication

I can do good even when my supervisor is bad: Abusive supervision and employee socially responsible behaviour

abusive supervision
ego depletion
impulse control demands
self- control theory
socially responsible behaviour
2024
N. BABU ,
W. RIVKIN ,
S. BHATTACHARYA

2024, Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology, 97(02), pp.555-578

Resumo

Existing research has convincingly demonstrated the del- eterious impact of abusive supervision within the bounda- ries of the organization. However, we ask, can the harmful consequences of abusive supervision extend beyond organi- zational boundaries, and in particular, impact social good creation? To answer this crucial question, the present study investigates whether, how, and when abusive supervision affects employees' socially responsible behaviour (SRB). We build on ego depletion theory, and its theoretical ex- tension, the integrative self-control theory, to develop and test a multi-level model that advances our understanding of the psychological mechanisms through, and boundary con- ditions under which abusive supervision affects employee SRB. Findings from a weekly diary study across 12 weeks support: (1) the role of ego depletion as a core psychological process that underlies the negative impact of weekly abusive supervision on employees' SRB and (2) the role of both trait abusive supervision and weekly impulse control demands as critical boundary conditions that determine whether weekly abusive supervision impacts SRB. These findings have im- portant implications for the abusive supervision and social responsibility literatures, advancing our understanding of what organizations can do to alleviate the detrimental con- sequences of abusive supervision for social good creation.