2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.leaqua.2012.05.003
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Abusive supervision and work–family conflict: The path through emotional labor and burnout

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Cited by 298 publications
(259 citation statements)
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“…To solve this problem, Wu measured the subordinates' emotional labor, and found that the abusive management playing an intermediary role through the subordinates' emotional labor, namely the higher authority Subordinates perceived, the more emotional labor abusive of management led subordinates to invest [19]. Carlson, who also did the corresponding research, found that surface acting playing an intermediary role in the relationship between supervisors' abusive management and subordinates' job burnout, but Carlson ignored the path of the deep acting in the study [20]. In view of this, Wu and Hu's studies, based on action theory, have found that, abusive management has positive correlation with the subordinate's surface acting, and has a negative correlation with subordinate's deep acting, which indicates that outgoing character will regulate relationship between abusive management and two kinds of emotional labor strategy [28].…”
Section: Subordinates' Emotional Labor On Supervisorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To solve this problem, Wu measured the subordinates' emotional labor, and found that the abusive management playing an intermediary role through the subordinates' emotional labor, namely the higher authority Subordinates perceived, the more emotional labor abusive of management led subordinates to invest [19]. Carlson, who also did the corresponding research, found that surface acting playing an intermediary role in the relationship between supervisors' abusive management and subordinates' job burnout, but Carlson ignored the path of the deep acting in the study [20]. In view of this, Wu and Hu's studies, based on action theory, have found that, abusive management has positive correlation with the subordinate's surface acting, and has a negative correlation with subordinate's deep acting, which indicates that outgoing character will regulate relationship between abusive management and two kinds of emotional labor strategy [28].…”
Section: Subordinates' Emotional Labor On Supervisorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been found that certain work variables e.g., work time schedule, self-employment, number and age of children, type of employment contract, are the factors that affect the relationship between work and private life [35][36][37]. Additionally, research of Dyrbye et al [10] showed that such factors as: hours worked per week; occurrence of work-home conflict in the past 3 weeks; and resolving showed that work-home interaction mediated the relationship between various variables (stress role, job/home demands and resources, workload, job schedule, organizational justice) [23], and burnout [4,14,21,24,25]. A few longitudinal studies brought the answer on the causal relationship between these phenomena [26][27][28].…”
Section: Burnoutmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(O'Connell and Bligh, 2009). Where poor managerial decisions increase the level of frustration among employees, the result is an unwillingness to work, lower production, workforce exhaustion and high nervous tension (Detert et al, 2007;Prottas, 2008;Rafferty et al, 2010;Kim and Brymer, 2011;Carlson et al, 2012;Andrew et al, 2013). On the other hand, employees who feel fairly treated exhibit decreased absenteeism, and increased job performance, satisfaction and motivation all of which cut staff turnover Trevino et al, 2006;Johnson, 2007;Leroy et al, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%