No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2018
Cortina, Rabelo, and Holland (2018) make a compelling case for shifting away from a victim precipitation perspective in industrial and organizational (I-O) psychology. In addition to noting that victim precipitation potentially violates ethical principles, the authors suggest that such paradigms shape attributions of blame and implications for practice within organizations. This commentary builds upon the ideas discussed in the focal article by encouraging I-O psychologists to collect data on the extent to which victim precipitation appears in the field and experimentally examine how and why the paradigms we use to explain workplace mistreatment might affect attitudes and behavior.
Target article
Beyond Blaming the Victim: Toward a More Progressive Understanding of Workplace Mistreatment
Related commentaries (11)
A Comprehensive Approach to Empowering Victims and Understanding Perpetrators
Beyond Victims and Perpetrators
Centering the Target of Mistreatment in Our Measures
Considerations Related to Intentionality and Omissive Acts in the Study of Workplace Aggression and Mistreatment
It Takes Two to Tango: Victims, Perpetrators, and the Dynamics of Victimization
Mistreatment in Organizations: Toward a Perpetrator-Focused Research Agenda
Police Shootings and Race in the United States: Why the Perpetrator Predation Perspective Is Essential to I-O Psychology's Role in Ending This Crisis
Research Framing, Victim Blaming: Toward an Empirical Examination of Victim Precipitation and Perpetrator Predation Paradigms
Victim Precipitation and the Wage Gap
Victim Precipitation: Let's Not Silence That Voice
Who Is the Wolf and Who Is the Sheep? Toward a More Nuanced Understanding of Workplace Incivility