When Institutions Harm Those Who Depend on Them: A Scoping Review of Institutional Betrayal

The term institutional betrayal (Smith and Freyd, 2014) builds on the conceptual framework of betrayal trauma theory (see Freyd, 1996) to describe the ways that institutions (e.g., universities, workplaces) fail to take appropriate steps to prevent and/or respond appropriately to interpersonal traum...

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Veröffentlicht in:Trauma, Violence, & Abuse Violence, & Abuse, 2024-10, Vol.25 (4), p.2797-2813
Hauptverfasser: Christl, Maria-Ernestina, Pham, Kim-Chi Tran, Rosenthal, Adi, DePrince, Anne P.
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container_end_page 2813
container_issue 4
container_start_page 2797
container_title Trauma, Violence, & Abuse
container_volume 25
creator Christl, Maria-Ernestina
Pham, Kim-Chi Tran
Rosenthal, Adi
DePrince, Anne P.
description The term institutional betrayal (Smith and Freyd, 2014) builds on the conceptual framework of betrayal trauma theory (see Freyd, 1996) to describe the ways that institutions (e.g., universities, workplaces) fail to take appropriate steps to prevent and/or respond appropriately to interpersonal trauma. A nascent literature has begun to describe individual costs associated with institutional betrayal throughout the United States (U.S.), with implications for public policy and institutional practice. A scoping review was conducted to quantify existing study characteristics and key findings to guide research and practice going forward. Multiple academic databases were searched for keywords (i.e., “institutional betrayal” and “organizational betrayal”). Thirty-seven articles met inclusion criteria (i.e., peer-reviewed empirical studies of institutional betrayal) and were included in analyses. Results identified research approaches, populations and settings, and predictor and outcome variables frequently studied in relation to institutional betrayal. This scoping review describes a strong foundation of published studies and provides recommendations for future research, including longitudinal research with diverse individuals across diverse institutional settings. The growing evidence for action has broad implications for research-informed policy and institutional practice.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/15248380241226627
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source MEDLINE; SAGE Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Humans
Interpersonal Relations
Population studies
Public policy
Trauma
United States
Universities
Workplace - psychology
Workplaces
title When Institutions Harm Those Who Depend on Them: A Scoping Review of Institutional Betrayal
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