Most people think of bullies as a playground issue for schoolchildren.
Adult bullying in the workplace, however, can be extremely harmful to
its victims-even more so than sexual harassment-and it may be far more
common than most people realize, according to new research.



Business researchers Sandy Hershcovis of the University of Manitoba and
Julian Barling of Queen's University in Ontario combined and
analyzed 111 studies on workplace social dynamics. They discovered that
as compared with workers who have experienced sexual harassment, victims
of bullying report feeling angrier and more stressed at work-and are
more likely to quit their job.



Workplace bullying, which includes ostracizing co-workers, spreading
office gossip, and insulting people about their job performance or
private life, is also more prevalent than sexual harassment. According
to the workplace Bullying Institute (WBI), a nonprofit organization that
advocates for victims' right, 37 percent of U.S employees have been
bullied at their job, as opposed to 8 to 10 percent who have been
sexuality harassed.



Psychologist Gary Namie, director of the WBI, thinks the lack of legal
consequences is one reason bullying causes more harm than sexual
harassment does-its victims often suffer without receiving much help or
sympathy. "Bullying situations are minimized as `mere
personality conflicts,' and targets feel delegitimized," Namie
says. Hershcovis thinks the simplest solution is for companies to take
things into their own hands: "Implementing [company] policy and
enforcing it is the best way" to stop bullying, she says.


Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
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