The Regulating Role of Mindfulness in Enacted Workplace Incivility: An Experience Sampling Study

Incivility at work poses a problem, both for individuals who are the targets of incivility and for organizations. However, relatively little is known about what drives or hinders individuals to engage in incivility, and how they respond to their own uncivil behavior. Adopting a self-regulation persp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of applied psychology 2021-08, Vol.106 (8), p.1250-1265
Hauptverfasser: Hülsheger, Ute R., van Gils, Suzanne, Walkowiak, Alicia
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container_title Journal of applied psychology
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creator Hülsheger, Ute R.
van Gils, Suzanne
Walkowiak, Alicia
description Incivility at work poses a problem, both for individuals who are the targets of incivility and for organizations. However, relatively little is known about what drives or hinders individuals to engage in incivility, and how they respond to their own uncivil behavior. Adopting a self-regulation perspective, we link theories explaining enacted incivility as self-regulatory failure with research about the self-regulatory benefits of mindfulness. We develop and investigate a conceptual model on the role of trait mindfulness in antecedent- and consequent-based processes of enacted workplace incivility. Data from an experience-sampling study across 5 work days provided support for the majority of our hypotheses. Individuals high in trait mindfulness not only showed generally low levels of enacted incivility, but they also displayed less variability in enacted incivility over time. Specifically, while enacted incivility was entrained to the work week and systematically decreased from Monday to Friday for individuals low in mindfulness, enacted incivility remained stable over the course of the work week for individuals high in mindfulness. Furthermore, employees high in trait mindfulness reacted in a more morally mature manner and experienced guilt when having engaged in uncivil behavior compared to their low mindful counterparts. However, increases in guilt for high mindful individuals did not translate into lower levels of enacted incivility the following work day.
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source EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA)
subjects Antisocial Behavior
Conceptual models
Ecological momentary assessment
Emotional Responses
Employee Interaction
Female
Guilt
Human
Incivility
Male
Mindfulness
Organizational Behavior
Self regulation
Workplaces
Workweeks
title The Regulating Role of Mindfulness in Enacted Workplace Incivility: An Experience Sampling Study
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