Ricky W. Griffin and, Anne M. O’Leary-Kelly

#Organizational_Behavior
#Management
#Business
#Organizations
In one comprehensive collection, The Dark Side of Organizational Behavior provides a framework for understanding the most current thinking on the negative consequences of organizational behavior. Written by experts in the field, the contributors to The Dark Side of Organizational Behavior focus on the causes, processes, and consequences of behaviors in organizations that have a negative effect on the organization and the people in them.
Table of Contents
1 An Introduction to the Dark Side
Part One: Workplace Aggression and Violence: Truly Dark Places
2 Workplace Aggression and Violence: Insights from Basic Research
3 Injustice, Stress, and Aggression in Organizations
4 When the Dark Side of Families Enters the Workplace: The Case of Intimate Partner Violence
Part Two: Discrimination and the Dark Side
5 Subtle (and Not So Subtle) Discrimination in Organizations
6 Sexual Harassment as Dysfunctional Behavior in Organizations
7 Out of the Closet and Out of a Job? The Nature, Import, and Causes of Sexual Orientation Discrimination in the Workplace
Part Three: The Dark Side of Interpersonal Influence
8 The Dark Side of Politics in Organizations
9 Under-the-Table Deals: Preferential, Unauthorized, or Idiosyncratic?
10 Extreme Careerism: The Dark Side of Impression Management
11 Psychological Contract Breach and Violation in Organizations
Part Four: The Dark Side in Other Places
12 Alcohol and Drug Use in the Workplace
13 Broadening Our Understanding of Organizational Retaliatory Behavior
14 On Incivility, Its Impact, and Directions for Future Research
Ricky W. Griffin is professor of management, holds the Blocker Chair in Business, and currently serves as the executive associate dean in the Mays Business School at Texas A&M University. He served the Academy of Management as both Organizational Behavior Division Chair and Research Methods Program Chair.
Anne M. O'Leary-Kelly is an associate professor in the department of management at the University of Arkansas, and she is a member of the executive committee of the organizational behavior division of the Academy of Management.









