When expressing forgiveness backfires in the workplace: victim power moderates the effect of expressing forgiveness on transgressor compliance

Xue Zheng (First Author), David De Cremer (Participant Author), Jayanth Narayanan (Participant Author), Marius van Dijke (Participant Author)

科研成果: 期刊稿件期刊论文

7 引用 (Web of Science)

摘要

Expressing (vs. withholding) forgiveness is often promoted as a beneficial response for victims. In the present research, we argue that withholding (vs. expressing) forgiveness can also be beneficial to victims by stimulating subsequent transgressor compliance - a response that is valuable in restoring the victim's needs for control. Based on deterrence theory, we argue that a victim's withheld (vs. expressed) forgiveness promotes transgressor compliance when the victim has low power, relative to the transgressor. This is because withheld (vs. expressed) forgiveness from a low-power victim elicits transgressor fear. On the other hand, because people are fearful of high-power actors, high-power victims can expect high levels of compliance from a transgressor, regardless of whether they express forgiveness or not. A critical incidents survey (Study 1) and an autobiographic recall study (Study 2) among employees, as well as a laboratory experiment among business students (Study 3), support these predictions. These studies are among the first to reveal that withholding forgiveness can be beneficial for low-power victims in a hierarchical context - ironically, a context in which offering forgiveness is often expected.
源语言英语
页(从-至)70-87
期刊European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology
27
1
DOI
已出版 - 2018

Corresponding author email

zhengxue.academic@gmail.com

关键词

  • Power
  • compliance
  • deterrence theory
  • fear
  • forgiveness

成果物的来源

  • ABDC-B
  • Scopus
  • SSCI

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