Zurbrügg Lauren, Miner Kathi N
Department of Psychology, Texas A&M University, College Station TX, USA.
Department of Psychology and Women's and Gender Studies Program, Texas A&M University, College Station TX, USA.
Front Psychol. 2016 May 2;7:565. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00565. eCollection 2016.
Scholars have proposed that interpersonal workplace discrimination toward members of oppressed social groups has become covert and subtle rather than overt and explicit and that such experiences lead to negative outcomes for targets. The present study examined this proposition by examining experiences and consequences of workplace incivility-a seemingly harmless form of interpersonal maltreatment-based on gender, sexual orientation, and their intersection. A sample of 1,300 academic faculty (52% male, 86% White) participated in an online survey study assessing their experiences of workplace incivility, job stress, job satisfaction, job identity centrality, and demographics. Results showed that sexual minority women reported the highest levels of workplace incivility. Findings also revealed that women reported lower job satisfaction than men and that heterosexuals reported higher job stress and lower job identity centrality than sexual minorities with higher levels of incivility. Thus, sexual minority status buffered the negative effects of incivility for sexual minorities. These findings point to the resiliency of sexual minorities in the face of interpersonal stressors at work.
学者们提出,职场中针对受压迫社会群体成员的人际歧视已变得隐蔽而微妙,而非公开且直白,并且此类经历会给目标对象带来负面后果。本研究通过考察职场无礼行为(一种看似无害的人际虐待形式)基于性别、性取向及其交叉情况的经历和后果,对这一观点进行了检验。1300名学术教员(52%为男性,86%为白人)参与了一项在线调查研究,评估他们在职场无礼行为、工作压力、工作满意度、工作身份核心度以及人口统计学方面的经历。结果显示,性少数群体女性报告的职场无礼行为水平最高。研究结果还表明,女性报告的工作满意度低于男性,并且异性恋者报告的工作压力高于性少数群体,工作身份核心度低于遭受更高水平无礼行为的性少数群体。因此,性少数群体身份缓冲了无礼行为对性少数群体的负面影响。这些发现表明性少数群体在面对工作中的人际压力源时具有恢复力。