10 1108 - Ijwhm 07 2019 0096
10 1108 - Ijwhm 07 2019 0096
10 1108 - Ijwhm 07 2019 0096
www.emeraldinsight.com/1753-8351.htm
Toxic
The lived experience of leadership in
toxic leadership in Irish higher
education
Irish higher education
Declan Fahie 341
School of Education, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland
Received 10 July 2019
Revised 17 September 2019
Accepted 25 September 2019
Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to reveal the lived experience of toxic leadership for a cohort of 11
individuals who work, or have worked, in the field of higher education in Ireland. Drawing on national and
international literature, as well as the testimonies of a cohort of academic and administrative staff, the study
considers the impact of this negative management style on these individuals as well as upon the organisation itself.
Design/methodology/approach – A total of 11 self-selected individuals (four males and seven females)
were interviewed for this pilot study. Data from the semi-structured interviews were organised thematically
and analysed with the support of the computer software package MAXQDA®.
Findings – The results show that the experience of toxic leadership was profound for the interviewees across
a number of contexts. They reported adverse physical and psychological impacts as well as detailing the
repercussions for their respective career trajectories as they endeavoured to safely navigate their often-hostile
work environment. Human resources departments within their respective institutions were the focus of
considerable criticism by the interviewees who highlighted, what they saw as, the inherent contradiction/
tension between the perceived roles and responsibilities of such departments in addressing or resolving
interpersonal work-related disputes.
Originality/value – The findings expand on the extant scholarly literature on toxic leadership in higher
education and, for the first time, offer a revealing insight on this phenomenon within the Irish context.
Keywords Stress, Higher education, Human resources, Workplace bullying, Toxic leadership
Paper type Research paper
Every worker has the right to working conditions which respect his or her health, safety and
dignity. (EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, Article 31)
Introduction
The right referred to above places an explicit obligation on all employers to purposefully
safeguard the well-being – both psychological and physical – of their employees. Article 31
of the Charter of Fundamental Human Rights (2000) requires the employer to ensure that
they proactively and systematically foster a culture of respect for all employees, one which
supports their safety and welfare in the workplace. Echoing these obligations, Irish workers
are protected by the Safety, Health and Welfare at Work Act, 2005 which, as well as
requiring employers to provide workers with a safe work environment, demands that they
identify any potential hazards in the workplace, regularly assess such hazards and detail
steps/strategies they will undertake to protect workers against them. However, despite these
legislative protections, national and international research has consistently highlighted
sectors where workplace interpersonal relations have been fraught, resulting in pernicious
health consequences for employees affected (Boddy and Croft, 2016; Erikson et al., 2015;
Fahie, 2017). While all sectors have experienced challenges in this area, the public sector and
particularly the field of education, has emerged as having relatively high rates of workplace
conflict, incivility and bullying (ESRI, 2007; Ariza-Montes et al., 2016), resulting in International Journal of Workplace
significant negative impacts on workers’ health and well-being (Fahie, 2013, 2014). In this Health Management
Vol. 13 No. 3, 2020
regard, higher education has been the specific focus of research for a number for years pp. 341-355
(Twale and DeLuca, 2008; Scott, 2018) and, reflecting widespread anecdotal “evidence” © Emerald Publishing Limited
1753-8351
and/or media commentary, working within the university sector can present particular DOI 10.1108/IJWHM-07-2019-0096
IJWHM relational/social challenges, particularly for young researchers or newly appointed,
13,3 temporary/untenured academic or administrative staff (Waters, 2018; Scott, 2018).
This study analyses the experiences of 11 individuals who work, or have worked in, Irish
universities or Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) and who believe that they were adversely
affected – personally and professionally – by, what they considered to be, the toxic leadership
style of their manager/superior. While the impact of work-based negative interpersonal
342 interaction can prove significant for both the individual and the organisation (Kline and Lewis,
2018), there has been little research on the role of leadership, particularly toxic leadership in
developing and maintaining a negative workplace dynamics and the impact of this behaviour on
employees, particularly in Irish universities. This paper will address this lacuna in Irish research.
Toxic leadership
Einarsen et al. (2007, p. 207) offer a seminal definition of the term “destructive leadership” as
“the systematic and repeated behaviour by a leader, supervisor or manager that violates the
legitimate interest of the organisation by undermining and/or sabotaging the organisation’s
goals, tasks, resources, and effectiveness and/or the motivation, well-being or job satisfaction
of his/her subordinates”. They go on to argue that this aberrant “performance” of leadership
manifests as tyrannical, derailed and, at times, contradictory behaviours on the part of those
who hold positions of authority within an organisation. However, there remains an absence of
definitional consensus on what, in practice, is meant by the term Toxic Leadership (Yavaş,
2016). Scholars have conceptualised toxic leadership as “a leadership style distinguished by
abusive behaviours used to bully or control others” (Berdahl et al., 2018, p. 501), it is considered
to be a type of “[…]leadership focused on maintaining position of control via toxic influence
attempts[…]” (Milosevic et al., 2019, p. 2) which “results in negative but pervasive
consequences that trickle down and create a stressful environment that adversely affects the
subordinate’s professional and personal life” (Dykes and Winn, 2019, p. 39). This style of
leadership – also known as dark leadership (Otto et al., 2018, for example), destructive
leadership (Padilla et al., 2007; Thoroughgood et al., 2018) or, simply, bad leadership
(Kellerman, 2004), and the behaviour it implies – impacts significantly on the individual on a
psychological, emotional and economic level (see Webster et al., 2016, for example), as well as
upon the organisation itself – in the form of high staff turnover, increased cynicism,
diminution of loyalty to organisation and counterproductive job behaviour by employees
(MacLennan, 2017; Burke, 2017; Dobbs and Do, 2019). Indeed, toxic leadership has been seen
as a considerable factor in the development and maintenance of workplace bullying dynamics
within an organisation (Webster, 2016; Malik et al., 2019). Resulting in stress (Hadadian, and
Zarei, 2016), anxiety and increased absences (Webster et al., 2016), as well as a sense of ennui
or dehumanisation (Ozer et al., 2017).
There are, according to Pelletier (2010), eight dimensions of toxic leadership: attacks on
followers’ self-esteem – demeaning/marginalising, or degrading employees; lack of integrity –
being deceptive, blaming others for leader’s mistakes, going against his or her word, bending
the rules to meet goals; abusiveness – threatening employee’s occupational and/or personal
security; social exclusion – excluding individuals from social functions; divisiveness –
ostracising employees, telling an employee that he or she is not a team player; promoting
inequity – exhibiting favouritism; threat to followers’ security – using physical acts of
aggression, forcing employees to endure hardship; and Laissez-Faire style – failure to listen or
act on employee concerns, disengagement, stifling dissent, criticising employees when they
speak out. Other researchers have focussed on the personality traits/characteristics of toxic
leaders, positing, what they believe to be, their common qualitative personality or operational
attributes. In this context, Lipman-Blumen (2005) – and echoed later by Heppell (2011) –
defined toxic leaders as “those individuals who by dint of their destructive behaviours and
dysfunctional personal qualities generate a serious and enduring poisonous effect on the
individuals, families, organisations, communities and even entire societies they lead” (p. 29). Toxic
Lipman-Blumen (2011) sees the absence of integrity, ambition, ego, arrogance, immorality, leadership in
avarice and insensitivity as some of the key personal traits of the toxic leader. A later study by Irish higher
Yavaş (2016) places egocentrism as a central component to toxic leadership as well as negative
mood, unappreciation, instability and uncertainty, and autocratical management behaviour. education
Nonetheless, the type and quality of leadership in organisations has also been put
forward as a significant factor in shaping workplace cultures (Villanueva, 2017) and there is 343
increasing awareness of the negative impact of bad leadership on workers and
organisations (Kellerman, 2004; Wynne et al., 2017), particularly within higher education
(Waters, 2018). Paradoxically, and underscoring the complexity of the issue itself,
complaints of inappropriate or aggressive behaviours on the part of leaders are sometimes
viewed by senior management as, an albeit spurious, success indicator, thus highlighting
the perceived relationship between aggressive/macho leadership and organisational success
(Lipman-Blumen, 2005; Duffy and Sperry, 2012; Matos et al., 2018). Consequently,
interpersonal incivility and toxic organisational cultures can be tolerated (or even fostered)
by senior management who may apportion a spurious causal relationship between toxic
behaviours by mangers and increased productivity/organisational success. Indeed, Erikson
et al. (2015) argue that a destructive leader may have traits that the organisation considers
productive or useful is other contexts. Unsurprisingly, leadership behaviour has been seen
as a critical antecedent of bullying behaviours in the workplace (Woodrow and Guest, 2017).
Indeed, tyrannical or authoritarian styles of leadership foster a culture of fear and may be
seen as strong predictors of workplace tensions, disputes and bullying (Salin and Hoel,
2011). This is particularly the case in organisations with a rigid hierarchical framework of
power relations (Blase et al., 2008; Beale and Hoel, 2011). Fortunately, organisations, where
more transformative leadership styles are adopted (see Dopson et al., 2019), are less likely to
develop workplace bullying dynamics that those where the supervisory mode is more
laissez-faire, transactional or pernicious (Lewis, 2003; Dussault and Frenette, 2015).
Methodology
Accessing, recruiting and retaining appropriate research sample populations for studies of
sensitive topics can prove problematic, particularly when such issues include workplace
bullying or work-related incivility (see Fahie and McGillicuddy, 2018). Having first been
granted formal institutional ethical approval, 11 individuals were interviewed for this pilot
study. These were drawn, at random, from a larger sample of 46 persons who replied to a
Twitter© post asking for interested parties to contact the author about their experiences of,
what they considered to be, toxic leadership in higher education. (The remaining 35
participants will be interviewed at a later date for a larger funded study). This tweet had a
reach of almost 67,000 individuals with 1,290 people actively engaging with the tweet (this
included 226 retweets). The sample comprises of seven females and four males. All of the
individuals work, or have worked, in higher education in Ireland and their experiences of
toxic leadership occurred in Irish institutions.
Of the eleven interviewees, five work within universities across the republic, two work in
colleges of education, two work in Institutes of Technology and two work within other
(potentially identifiable) HEIs. Three of the sample were administrators or post-graduate
students employed by the university/college. One member of the sample was a PhD
candidate at the time of the negative interactions and is now employed as an academic. The
semi-structured interviews were informed by the literature and conducted in “safe” locations
of the interviewees choosing and lasted between 45 min and 2 h. Contemporaneous field
noted were also taken by the author. The code and retrieve software package MAXQDA
was employed to assist in the organisation of emergent themes and the resulting thematic
analysis of the narrative storytelling (Bourbonnais and Michaud, 2018). All names and
identifying details were altered/deleted to protect the anonymity of interviewees.
Discussion
The negative impact of toxic leadership on employees, bystanders and the organisation
itself is considerable (Pelletier, 2010; Boddy and Croft, 2016; MacLennan, 2017). Echoing this
previous research, the data from this study reveal a number of key issues to consider. First,
IJWHM there is a significant cost of negative workplace interaction and the “fallout” from toxic
13,3 leadership can prove considerable for the individual employee. Mirroring Erikson et al.
(2015) and Webster et al. (2016), for example, interviewees detailed the physical,
psychological and professional cost of the negative interaction/incivility with their superiors
and how this, in turn, shapes their career aspirations and trajectory. The distress and
discontent recounted by interviewees, as well as the clear articulation of the career-
350 compromising, self-preservation strategies employed as mitigating/moderating techniques,
has implications for their loyalty to the organisation, engagement with their work,
collegiality and productivity (Boddy and Croft, 2016). The resulting fear-induced
balkanisation of staff into sub-cultural/counter-cultural silos is anathema to the fostering
of healthy workplace relationship and has obvious implications for personal well-being as
well as for productivity within departments/schools. In addition, given the relatively small
scale of the higher education sector (particularly in a country the size of Ireland), the
institution will quickly experience a loss of reputation resulting, for example, in significant
difficulties in attracting and retaining staff. Given the increasing precarity for those
working in the academy (Ivancheva et al., 2019), these issues are particularly pertinent for
those employees (both academic and administrative) on temporary or part-time contracts
who often feel impotent to challenge unjust treatment without the support of more
(powerful) senior colleagues. Such structural and systemic inequities within higher
education must be addressed as a matter of urgency.
HR departments have a responsibility to ensure that all staff are treated with dignity and
respect in the workplace (Rockett et al., 2017). However, data consistently revealed a
palpable mistrust of, and sense of disengagement from, institutional HR department
personnel; highlighting an inherent structural tension between the dual (but seemingly
unequal) responsibilities of HR to simultaneously safeguard and represent both the staff
member and the organisation itself in any dispute. In addition, it is notable that the
mechanisms/policies/procedures designed to deal with interpersonal disputes were seen by
many of the interviewees as lacking in transparency, unfair and/or biased. This clearly
points to a paradoxical incongruity between the public/official institutional rhetoric of
supportive, collegial performativity (as manifested in well-being initiatives and community
engagement) and the attitude of employees towards these departments.
This underscores a need for a transparent warning system in each institution whereby HR
would routinely monitor each department/school/section for “red flags” (a disproportionate
number of absences/sick leave due to stress, relatively high turn-over of staff, difficulty in
recruiting new staff, large volume of complaints from staff members). Critically, there would
be a clear obligation on one individual to respond to these as part of the institution’s legal and
moral duty of care towards employees. This individual need not necessarily be a member of
the HR department itself and would act as an independent advocate liaising between staff and
college management. All staff would have to be made aware of these procedures and reminded
on a regular basis. To support this liaison person, each department/school/office would be
obliged to conduct and publish a standard culture audit across a specified number of years.
Coupled with a regular upward evaluation of leaders, as well as training and support for those
in positions of leadership, such structural reforms would assist the institution in preventing
the development of toxic leadership dynamics.
Limitations
The sample size for this study is small and this has obvious implications for generalisability.
However, this is a pilot study and the response to the Twitter call for participants (detailed
above) indicates that the issue warrants further in-depth study. In this regard, the intention
is to secure funding for a comprehensive study across a number of institutions on this topic
with a variety of research methodologies employed.
References Toxic
Ariza-Montes, A., Muniz, R.N.M., Leal-Rodríguez, A.L. and Leal-Millán, A.G. (2016), “Workplace leadership in
bullying among teachers: an analysis from the Job Demands-Resources ( JD-R) model Irish higher
perspective”, Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Vol. 58 No. 8,
pp. 818-827. education
Beale, D. and Hoel, H. (2011), “Workplace bullying and the employment relationship: exploring
questions of prevention, control and context”, Work, Employment and Society, Vol. 25 No. 1, 351
pp. 5-18.
Berdahl, J.L., Cooper, M., Glick, P., Livingston, R.W. and Williams, J.C. (2018), “Work as a Masculinity
Contest”, Journal of Social Issues, Vol. 74 No. 3, pp. 422-448.
Birks, M., Budden, L.M., Stewart, L. and Chapman, Y. (2014), “Turning the tables: the growth of upward
bullying”, Journal of Advanced Nursing, No. 70 No. 8, pp. 1685-1687.
Blase, J., Blase, J. and Du, F. (2008), “The mistreated teacher: a national study”, Journal of Educational
Administration, Vol. 46 No. 3, pp. 263-301.
Blumer, H. (1969), Symbolic Interactionism Perspective and Method, University of California Press,
Berkeley, CA.
Boddy, C.R. and Croft, R. (2016), “Marketing in a time of toxic leadership”, Qualitative Market Research:
An International Journal, Vol. 19 No. 1, pp. 44-64.
Bourbonnais, A. and Michaud, C. (2018), “Once upon a time: storytelling as a knowledge translation
strategy for qualitative researchers”, Nursing Inquiry, Vol. 25 No. 4, pp. 1-7.
Bricheno, P. and Thornton, M. (2016), Crying in Cupboards – What Happens When Teachers are Bullied,
Matador Books, Leicestershire.
Burke, R.J. (2017), “Toxic leaders: exploring the dark side dagger”, Effective Executive, Vol. 20 No. 1,
pp. 10-14.
Courtois, A. and O’Keefe, T. (2015), “Precarity in the ivory cage: neoliberalism and casualisation of
work in the Irish higher education sector”, Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, Vol. 13
No. 1, pp. 43-66.
De Cieri, H., Sheehan, C., Donohue, R., Shea, T. and Cooper, B. (2019), “Workplace bullying: an
examination of power and perpetrators”, Personnel Review, Vol. 48 No. 2, pp. 324-341.
Diefenbach, T. (2009), “New public management in public sector organizations: the dark sides of
managerialistic ‘enlightenment’ ”, Public Administration, Vol. 87 No. 4, pp. 892-909.
Dobbs, J.M. and Do, J.J. (2019), “The impact of perceived toxic leadership on cynicism in officer
candidates”, Armed Forces & Society, Vol. 45 No. 1, pp. 3-26.
Dopson, S., Ferlie, E., McGivern, G., Fischer, M.D., Mitra, M., Ledger, J. and Behrens, S. (2019),
“Leadership development in higher education: a literature review and implications for
programme redesign”, Higher Education Quarterly, Vol. 73 No. 2, pp. 218-234.
Duffy, M. and Sperry, L. (2012), Mobbing – Causes, Consequences, and Solutions, Oxford University
Press, Oxford.
Dussault, M. and Frenette, É. (2015), “Supervisors’ transformational leadership and bullying in the
workplace”, Psychological Reports, Vol. 117 No. 3, pp. 724-733.
Dykes, A.C. and Winn, G.L. (2019), “Identifying toxic leadership and building worker resilience”,
Professional Safety, Vol. 64 No. 3, pp. 38-45.
Einarsen, S., Aasland, M.S. and Skogstad, A. (2007), “Destructive leadership behaviour: a definition and
conceptual model”, The Leadership Quarterly, Vol. 18 No. 3, pp. 207-216.
Erikson, A., Shaw, B., Murray, J. and Branch, S. (2015), “Destructive leadership: causes, consequences
and countermeasures”, Organizational Dynamics, Vol. 44 No. 4, pp. 266-272.
ESRI (2007), “Bullying in the workplace: survey reports, 2007”, Report to the Department of
Enterprise, Trade and Employment, Economic & Social Research Institute, The Stationery
Office, Dublin.
IJWHM ESRI (2018), “Job stress and working conditions – Ireland in comparative perspective ESRI”, Dublin,
13,3 available at: https://doi.org/10.26504/rs84
Fahie, D. (2013), “Workplace bullying and primary school teachers: the role of managerialist
discourses”, in O’Moore, M. and Stevens, P. (Eds), Bullying in Irish Education, Cork University
Press, Cork, pp. 211-235.
Fahie, D. (2014), “Blackboard bullies: workplace bullying in primary schools”, Irish Educational Studies,
352 Vol. 33 No. 4, pp. 435-450.
Fahie, D. (2016), “ ‘Spectacularly exposed and vulnerable’– how Irish equality legislation subverted the
personal and professional security of lesbian, gay and bisexual teachers”, Sexualities, Vol. 19
No. 4, pp. 393-411, doi: 10.1177/1363460715604331.
Fahie, D. (2017), “Faith of Our Fathers – lesbian, gay and bisexual teachers’ attitudes towards the
teaching of religion in Irish denominational primary schools”, Irish Educational Studies, Vol. 36
No. 1, pp. 9-24.
Fahie, D. and Devine, D. (2014), “The impact of workplace bullying on primary school teachers and
principals”, Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, Vol. 58 No. 2, pp. 235-252.
Fahie, D. and McGillicuddy, D. (2018), “The (Un)questionable challenges of sample access, recruitment
and retention in contemporary workplace bullying research”, in D’Cruz, P., Noronha, E.,
Notelaers, G. and Rayner, C. (Eds), Concepts, Approaches and Methods. Handbooks of Workplace
Bullying, Emotional Abuse and Harassment, Vol. 1, Springer, Singapore, available at: https://doi.
org/10.1007/978-981-10-5334-4_19-1
Feijó, F.R., Gräf, D.D., Pearce, N. and Fassa, A.G. (2019), “Risk factors for workplace bullying: a
systematic review”, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol. 16
No. 11, pp. 19-45.
Foucault, M. (1994), Power, Penguin, London.
Foucault, M. (2012), Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, Vintage, London.
Gardner, S.K. (2012), “ ‘I couldn’t wait to leave the toxic environment’: A mixed methods study of
women faculty satisfaction and departure from one research institution”, NASPA Journal About
Women in Higher Education, Vol. 5 No. 1, pp. 71-95.
Hadadian, Z. and Zarei, J. (2016), “Relationship between Toxic Leadership and job stress of knowledge
workers”, Studies in Business and Economics, Vol. 11 No. 3, pp. 84-89.
HEA (2017), “Key facts and figures”, Higher Education Authority, The Stationery Office, Dublin.
Heppell, T. (2011), “Toxic Leadership: applying the Lipman-Blumen model to Political Leadership”,
Representation, Vol. 47 No. 3, pp. 241-249.
Hodgins, M., Pursell, L., Hogan, V., MacCurtain, S., Mannix-McNamara, P. and Lewis, D. (2018), Irish
Workplace Behaviour Study, IOSH, Leicestershire.
Hollis, L.P. (2015), “Bully university? The cost of workplace bullying and employee disengagement in
American higher education”, Sage Open, Vol. 5 No. 2, pp. 1-11, doi: 10.1177/2158244015589997.
Ivancheva, M., Lynch, K. and Keating, K. (2019), “Precarity, gender and care in the neoliberal academy”,
Gender, Work & Organization, Vol. 26 No. 4, pp. 448-462.
Jenkins, M. (2013), Preventing and Managing Workplace Bullying and Harassment, Australian
Academic Press, Toowong.
Keashley, L. and Neuman, J.H. (2010), “Faculty experiences with bullying in higher education: causes,
consequences and management”, Administrative Theory and Praxis, Vol. 32 No. 1, pp. 48-70.
Kellerman, B. (2004), Bad Leadership, Harvard Business Review Press, Harvard.
Kline, R. and Lewis, D. (2018), “The price of fear: estimating the financial cost of bullying and
harassment to the NHS in England”, Public Money & Management, Vol. 39 No. 3, pp. 166-174.
Lewis, D. (2003), “Voices in the social construction of bullying at work: exploring multiple realities in
further and higher education”, International Journal of Management and Decision Making, Vol. 4
No. 1, pp. 65-81.
Lewis, D. and Rayner, C. (2003), “HRM: a wolf in sheep’s clothing”, in Einarsen, S., Hoel, H., Zapf, D. and Toxic
Cooper, C. (Eds), Bullying and Emotional Abuse in the Workplace: International Perspectives in leadership in
Research and Practice, Taylor and Francis, London, pp. 370-383.
Irish higher
Leymann, H. (1996), “The content and development of mobbing at work”, European Journal of Work
and Organizational Psychology, Vol. 5 No. 2, pp. 165-184. education
Lipman-Blumen, J. (2005), “Toxic Leadership: when grand illusions masquerade as noble visions”,
Leader to Leader, Vol. 20 No. 36, pp. 29-36. 353
Lipman-Blumen, J. (2011), “Toxic Leadership: a rejoinder”, Representation, Vol. 47 No. 3, pp. 331-342.
McCormack, D., Djurkovic, N., Nsubuga-Kyobe, A. and Casimir, G. (2018), “Workplace bullying: the
interactive effects of the perpetrator’s gender and the target’s gender”, Employee Relations,
Vol. 40 No. 2, pp. 264-280.
MacLennan, H. (2017), “The cost of Toxic Leadership: what the board didn’t see”, Journal of Leadership,
Accountability and Ethics, Vol. 14 No. 4, pp. 100-103.
Malik, M.S., Sattar, S., Younas, S. and Nawaz, M.K. (2019), “The workplace deviance perspective of
employee responses to workplace bullying: the moderating effect of Toxic Leadership and
mediating effect of emotional exhaustion”, Review of Integrative Business and Economics
Research, Vol. 8 No. 1, pp. 33-50.
Matos, K., O’Neill, O.M. and Lei, X. (2018), “Toxic Leadership and the masculinity contest culture: how
‘win or die’ cultures breed abusive leadership: toxic leadership”, Journal of Social Issues, Vol. 74
No. 3, pp. 500-528.
Mawdsley, H. and Lewis, D. (2017), “Lean and mean: how NPM facilitates the bullying of
UK employees with long-term health conditions”, Public Money and Management, Vol. 37 No. 5,
pp. 317-324.
Milosevic, I., Maric, S. and Loncar, D. (2019), “Defeating the Toxic Boss: the nature of Toxic Leadership
and the role of followers”, Journal of Leadership & Organizational Studies, pp. 1-21, doi: 10.1177/
1548051819833374.
NgaleIlongo, F. (2015), “Defining workplace bullying in institutions of higher learning”, Journal of
Organisation and Human Behaviour, Vol. 4 No. 1, pp. 6-12.
O’Keefe, T. and Courtois, A. (2019), “ ‘Not one of the family’: gender and precarious work in the
neoliberal university”, Gender, Work & Organization, Vol. 26 No. 4, pp. 463-479.
O’Neill, J. (2018), “The toxic university: zombie leadership, academic rock stars, and neoliberal
ideology”, Journal of Education Policy, Vol. 33 No. 3, pp. 440-441, doi: 10.1080/0268093
9.2017.1418729.
Otto, K., Thomson, B. and Rigotti, T. (2018), “When dark leadership exacerbates the effects of
restructuring”, Journal of Change Management, Vol. 18 No. 2, pp. 96-115.
Ozer, O., Ugurluoglu, O., Kahraman, G. and Avci, K. (2017), “A study on Toxic Leadership perceptions
of healthcare workers”, Global Business and Management Research: An International Journal,
Vol. 9 No. 4, pp. 12-23.
Padilla, A., Hogan, R. and Kaiser, R.B. (2007), “The toxic triangle: destructive leaders, susceptible
followers, and conducive environments”, The Leadership Quarterly, Vol. 18 No. 3, pp. 176-194.
Pelletier, K.L. (2010), “Leader toxicity: an empirical investigation of toxic behavior and rhetoric”,
Leadership, Vol. 6 No. 4, pp. 373-389.
Pheko, M.M. (2018), “Autoethnography and cognitive adaptation: two powerful buffers against
the negative consequences of workplace bullying and academic mobbing”, International
Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being, Vol. 13 No. 1, pp. 1-12, doi: 10.1080/
17482631.2018.1459134.
Pheko, M.M., Monteiro, N.M. and Segopolo, M.T. (2017), “When work hurts: a conceptual framework
explaining how organizational culture may perpetuate workplace bullying”, Journal of Human
Behavior in the Social Environment, Vol. 27 No. 6, pp. 571-588.
IJWHM Rai, A. and Agarwal, U.A. (2017), “Linking workplace bullying and work engagement: the mediating
13,3 role of psychological contract violation”, South Asian Journal of Human Resources Management,
Vol. 4 No. 1, pp. 42-71.
Rockett, P., Fan, S.K., Dwyer, R.J. and Foy, T. (2017), “A human resource management perspective of
workplace bullying”, Journal of Aggression, Conflict and Peace Research, Vol. 9 No. 2,
pp. 116-127.
354 Salin, D. and Hoel, H. (2011), “Organisational causes of workplace bullying”, in Einarsen, S., Hoel, H.,
Zapf, D. and Cooper, C.L. (Eds), Bullying and Harassment in the Workplace, CRC Press,
Boca Raton, FL, pp. 227-245.
Samnani, A.K. and Singh, P. (2016), “Workplace bullying: considering the interaction between
individual and work environment”, Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 139 No. 3, pp. 537-549.
Scott, S. (2018), “A refreshing perspective on the Toxic university and zombie leadership”,
Journal of Educational Administration and History, Vol. 50 No. 4, pp. 397-398, doi: 10.1080/
00220620.2018.1470495.
Smyth, J. (2018), The Toxic University, Palgrave Macmillan, London.
Thoroughgood, C.N., Padilla, A., Hunter, S.T. and Tate, B.W. (2012), “The susceptible circle: a
taxonomy of followers associated with destructive leadership”, The Leadership Quarterly,
Vol. 23 No. 5, pp. 897-917.
Thoroughgood, C.N., Sawyer, K.B., Padilla, A. and Lunsford, L. (2018), “Destructive leadership: a
critique of leader-centric perspectives and toward a more holistic definition”, Journal of Business
Ethics, Vol. 151 No. 3, pp. 627-649.
Twale, D. and De Luca, B. (2008), Faculty Incivility, Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA.
Villanueva, A. (2017), “Anatomy of an organizational train wreck: a failed leadership paradigm”,
in Normore, A.H. and Brooks, J.S. (Eds), The Dark Side of Leadership, Emerald Group Publishing
Limited, Bingley, pp. 19-35.
Waters, J. (2018), “The toxic university: zombie leadership, academic rock stars, and neoliberal
ideology”, British Journal of Sociology of Education, Vol. 39 No. 5, pp. 729-732, doi: 10.1080/
01425692.2018.1469259.
Weber, M. (1978), Economy and Society Volume 1, University of California Press, Berkley, CA.
Webster, M. (2016), “Challenging workplace bullying: the role of social work leadership integrity”,
Ethics and Social Welfare, Vol. 10 No. 4, pp. 316-332.
Webster, V., Brough, P. and Daly, K. (2016), “Fight, flight or freeze: common responses for follower
coping with Toxic Leadership”, Stress and Health, Vol. 32 No. 4, pp. 346-354.
Westhues, K. (2004), The Pope versus The Professor, Edwin Mellen Press, Lewiston, NY.
Woodrow, C. and Guest, D.E. (2017), “Leadership and approaches to the management of workplace
bullying”, European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology, Vol. 26 No. 2, pp. 221-233.
Wynne, J.Y. (2017), “Strong people don’t need strong leaders”, in Normore, A.H. and Brooks, J.S. (Eds),
The Dark Side of Leadership, Emerald Group Publishing, Bingley, pp. 95-113.
Yavaş, A. (2016), “Sectoral differences in the perception of Toxic Leadership”, Procedia – Social and
Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 229, pp. 267-276.
Zabrodska, K. and Kveton, P. (2013), “Prevalence and forms of workplace bullying among university
employees”, Employee Responsibilities and Rights Journal, Vol. 25 No. 2, pp. 89-108.
Zhang, Q., Larkin, C. and Lucey, B.M. (2017), “The economic impact of higher education institutions in
Ireland: evidence from disaggregated input-output tables”, Studies in Higher Education, Vol. 42
No. 9, pp. 1601-1623.
Further reading
European Union (2012), “Charter of fundamental rights of the European Union”, 2012/C 326/02, 26
October, available at: www.refworld.org/docid/3ae6b3b70.html (accessed 3 April 2019).
Mannix McNamara, P., Fitzpatrick, K., MacCurtain, S. and O’Brien, M. (2018), “Workplace bullying and Toxic
redress procedures: experiences of teachers in Ireland”, Qualitative Research in Organizations leadership in
and Management: An International Journal, Vol. 13 No. 1, pp. 79-97.
Paull, M., Omari, M. and Standen, P. (2012), “When is a bystander not a bystander? A typology of the
Irish higher
roles of bystanders in workplace bullying”, Asia Pacific Journal of Human Resources, Vol. 50 education
No. 3, pp. 351-366.
For instructions on how to order reprints of this article, please visit our website:
www.emeraldgrouppublishing.com/licensing/reprints.htm
Or contact us for further details: permissions@emeraldinsight.com