Skip to main content
Psychological ReportsVolume 122, Issue 5, 1 October 2019, Pages 1883-1906

Acceptance of Workplace Bullying Behaviors and Job Satisfaction: Moderated Mediation Analysis With Coping Self-Efficacy and Exposure to Bullying(Article)

  Save all to author list
  • Department of Psychology, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia

Abstract

Previous research explored workplace climate as a factor of workplace bullying and coping with workplace bullying, but these concepts were not closely related to workplace bullying behaviors (WBBs). To examine whether the perceived exposure to bullying mediates the relationship between the climate of accepting WBBs and job satisfaction under the condition of different levels of WBBs coping self-efficacy beliefs, we performed moderated mediation analysis. The Negative Acts Questionnaire – Revised was given to 329 employees from Serbia for assessing perceived exposure to bullying. Leaving the original scale items, the instruction of the original Negative Acts Questionnaire – Revised was modified for assessing (1) the climate of accepting WBBs and (2) WBBs coping self-efficacy beliefs. There was a significant negative relationship between exposure to bullying and job satisfaction. WBB acceptance climate was positively related to exposure to workplace bullying and negatively related to job satisfaction. WBB acceptance climate had an indirect relationship with job satisfaction through bullying exposure, and the relationship between WBB acceptance and exposure to bullying was weaker among those who believed that they were more efficient in coping with workplace bullying. Workplace bullying could be sustained by WBB acceptance climate which threatens the job-related outcomes. WBBs coping self-efficacy beliefs have some buffering effects. © The Author(s) 2018.

Author keywords

acceptance of workplace bullyingjob satisfactionSerbiaWorkplace bullyingworkplace bullying behaviors coping self-efficacy beliefs

Indexed keywords

EMTREE medical terms:adultagedbullyingcoping behavioremploymentfemalehumanjob satisfactionmalemiddle agedorganizational cultureperceptionpsychologyself conceptSerbiayoung adult
MeSH:Adaptation, PsychologicalAdultAgedBullyingEmploymentFemaleHumansJob SatisfactionMaleMiddle AgedOrganizational CultureSelf EfficacySerbiaSocial PerceptionYoung Adult

Funding details

Funding sponsor Funding number Acronym
Ministarstvo Prosvete, Nauke i Tehnološkog Razvoja179018
  • ISSN: 00332941
  • CODEN: PYRTA
  • Source Type: Journal
  • Original language: English
  • DOI: 10.1177/0033294118793985
  • PubMed ID: 30115005
  • Document Type: Article
  • Publisher: SAGE Publications Inc.

  Vukelić, M.; Department of Psychology, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia;
© Copyright 2019 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

Cited by 14 documents

Iqbal, J. , Parray, Z.A. , Bharadwaj, S.
Toxic workplaces, tarnished outcomes: understanding the effects of bullying on job outcomes
(2025) Evidence-based HRM
Vukelić, M. , Cahill, B.
International perspectives on the mental health of doctoral researchers
(2024) Prioritising the Mental Health and Wellbeing of Doctoral Researchers: Promoting Healthy Research Cultures
Eldan, I. , Tirassa, M. , Zedda, M.
Witnessing mobbing: Psychological consequences for men and women. A study in Israel
(2024) BPA Applied Psychology Bulletin
View details of all 14 citations
{"topic":{"name":"Nurse; Nursing Staff; Job Satisfaction","id":1576,"uri":"Topic/1576","prominencePercentile":97.43541,"prominencePercentileString":"97.435","overallScholarlyOutput":0},"dig":"e16f8e97574153824bf3167f3fefa3c1e2f77b67ef710ff4454e1ded58f73816"}

SciVal Topic Prominence

Topic:
Prominence percentile: