Contemporary worklife builds upon a foundation for teamwork among
skilled and dedicated people. Despite the utility of supportive working
relationships and despite extensive consulting activity on leadership
and team building, employees complain extensively about mistreatment by
their bosses and colleagues. Analyzing and Theorizing the Dynamics of
the Workplace Incivility Crisis presents a theoretic framework for
considering the fundamental issues of group dynamics and individual
psychology that lie behind this ongoing workplace incivility crisis. It
contextualizes the need for belonging as a motivation that shapes
expressed social behaviour and intensifies received social behaviour.
Looking at cognitive elements as well as rudeness rationales that
pertain to workplace incivility and its justification, this work maps
social constructs, including the role of team leadership, that lead to
setting implicit social norms. In addition to formulating a theoretical
framework, Analyzing and Theorizing the Dynamics of the Workplace
Incivility Crisis considers methods to address the dynamics that
perpetuate incivility at work and actively points at setting an action
agenda to evaluate their impact.