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Bad bosses and self-verification: The moderating role of core self-evaluations with trust in workplace management
Authors:Jonathan E. Booth  Amanda Shantz  Theresa M. Glomb  Michelle K. Duffy  Elizabeth E. Stillwell
Affiliation:1. Department of Management, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK;2. Trinity Business School, University of Dublin Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland;3. Carlson School of Management, Department of Work and Organizations, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Abstract:Who responds most strongly to supervisor social undermining? Building on self-verification theory (Swann, 1983, 1987), we theorize that employees with positive views of the self (i.e., higher core self-evaluations [CSEs]) who also maintain higher trust in workplace management are more likely to experience heightened stress and turnover intentions when undermined. We argue that this subset of employees (high CSE, high trust) are more likely to feel misunderstood when undermined by their supervisor and that this lack of self-verification partially explains their stronger responses to supervisor undermining. We find initial support for the first part of our model in a study of 259 healthcare workers in the United States and replicate and extend our findings in the second study of 330 employees in the United Kingdom. Our results suggest that the employees Human Resources often wishes to attract and retain—employees with high CSE and high trust in workplace management—react most strongly to supervisor social undermining.
Keywords:core self-evaluations  felt understanding  self-verification  stress appraisals  supervisor social undermining  trust in workplace management  turnover intentions
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