Fr. 226.00

Human Resource Perspectives on Workplace Bullying in Higher Education - Understanding Vulnerable Employees'' Experiences

English · Hardback

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Description

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This analytical volume uses qualitative data, quantitative data, and direct employee experiences to aid understanding of why workplace bullying occurs in universities throughout the US. To address higher education workplace bullying, this text offers data-driven interventions for human resource staff and departments to effectively tackle this destructive phenomenon.

Drawing on Hollis' first-hand research which is supported by findings from a 2019 Human Resources data collection, this text identifies populations which are most vulnerable to discrimination within academia. The data shows how human resource departments, executive leadership, and faculty might proactively intervene to prevent workplace bullying. Divided into two parts, the book offers empirical analysis of structural interventions for human resource efforts to combat workplace bullying in higher education. Second, the book puts forth solutions based on empirical findings for organizations and human resources to combat workplace aggression and civility which hurts higher education. Further, the author examines the specific effect of workplace harassment and cyberbullying on women of color, junior faculty, women, and the LGBTQ community.

This text will benefit researchers, doctoral students, and conducting higher education research. Additionally, the book focusses on structural issues which interfere with multicultural education more broadly. Those interested in Human Resource Management, the sociology of education, and gender and sexuality studies and will also enjoy this volume.

List of contents

Foreword by David C. Yamada
Introduction
Part 1: Human Resources and Higher Education
Chapter 1: Training Current HR Personnel for New Tricks: Analyzing the Relationship Between Training and Workplace Bullying.
Chapter 2: Speaking for Themselves: The Voices of Human Resources Personnel Regarding Workplace Bullying in Higher Education
Chapter 3: Is Bullying Baked into the University? The Organizational Placement of Human Resources and Its Relationship with Workplace Bullying
Chapter 4: Bullied About? Lawyer Up!: When Workplace Bullying Evolves into Legal Complaints
Chapter 5: Ombudsmen as Potential Peacemakers with Workplace Bullying in Higher Education
Part 2: Workplace Bullies and Vulnerable Populations
Chapter 6: The Procrustes Figure, the Curmudgeon, and the Snow White Syndrome: Styles of Higher Education Workplace Bullying
Chapter 7: An Unfair Fight: Black Women’s Additional Risk -- Facing "Mobbing" in Higher Education
Chapter 8: Pressure Points: Workplace bullying, Self-Determination, and Career Interruption for Women in Higher Education.
Chapter 9: New Kid on the Block? Mentoring for Junior Faculty and Dealing with Workplace Bullying
Chapter 10: High-Tech Harassment: A Chi-Square Confirmation that Workplace Cyberbullying Disproportionally Affects People of Color and the LGBQ Community in Higher Education
Chapter 11: Afterword
Appendix: Hollis Instrument Questions

About the author

Leah P. Hollis is Associate Professor in the Department of Advanced Studies, Leadership & Policy, Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD, USA, and also serves as a visiting scholar at the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Institute, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA.

Summary

This analytical volume uses qualitative data, quantitative data, and direct employee experiences to aid understanding of why workplace bullying occurs in universities throughout the US. To address higher education workplace bullying, this text offers data-driven interventions for human resource staff and departments to effectively tackle this destructive phenomenon.
Drawing on Hollis’ first-hand research which is supported by findings from a 2019 Human Resources data collection, this text identifies populations which are most vulnerable to discrimination within academia. The data shows how human resource departments, executive leadership, and faculty might proactively intervene to prevent workplace bullying. Divided into two parts, the book offers empirical analysis of structural interventions for human resource efforts to combat workplace bullying in higher education. Second, the book puts forth solutions based on empirical findings for organizations and human resources to combat workplace aggression and civility which hurts higher education. Further, the author examines the specific effect of workplace harassment and cyberbullying on women of color, junior faculty, women, and the LGBTQ community.
This text will benefit researchers, doctoral students, and conducting higher education research. Additionally, the book focusses on structural issues which interfere with multicultural education more broadly. Those interested in Human Resource Management, the sociology of education, and gender and sexuality studies and will also enjoy this volume.

Product details

Authors Leah P. Hollis, Leah P. (Morgan State University Hollis
Publisher Taylor & Francis Ltd.
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 13.05.2021
 
EAN 9780367509422
ISBN 978-0-367-50942-2
No. of pages 202
Series Routledge Research in Higher Education
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Education > Education system
Non-fiction book > Psychology, esoterics, spirituality, anthroposophy > Psychology: general, reference works

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