| At the Mercy of the Mob
A summary of research on workplace
mobbing
By Prof. Kenneth Westhues
University of Waterloo
Published in OHS Canada,
Canada's Occupational Health & Safety Magazine,
Vol. 18, No. 8, December 2002, pp. 30-36. Published
on the web, January 2003.
In
the early 1980s, a Swedish psychologist named Heinz
Leymann identified a grave threat to health and safety
in what appear to be the healthiest, safest workplaces
in the world. German was Leymann’s first language,
Swedish his second, but he labeled the distinct menace
he had found with an English word: mobbing.
Over the next twenty years, news
of Leymann’s discovery spread across Europe
and beyond. Untranslated, the English name he gave
it entered the vocabulary of workplace relations throughout
Scandinavia and in Germany, Italy, and other countries.
All across Europe, not only specialists in occupational
health but managers, union leaders, and the public
at large came to recognize workplace mobbing as a
real, measurable kind of harm, a destroyer of health
and life.
Strangely, recognition of Leymann’s
discovery has been slower in coming to the English-speaking
world. Newsweek published a popular summary
of research on workplace mobbing in 2000, but only
in its European edition. In Britain and America, attention
has focussed less on mobbing than on the different
but related problem of bullying, and, occasionally,
on one of its extremely rare possible results: the
outbursts of extreme violence, that from time to time
make headlines across the country.
Workplace mobbing was almost never
discussed in Canada until the coroner's inquest following
the murder of four workers at OC Transpo in Ottawa
in 1999. In that case, a former employee, Pierre Lebrun,
had ended the shooting spree by also taking his own
life. It turned out that Lebrun had been ridiculed
relentlessly by co-workers for his stutter, and then,
after he had slapped one of them in retaliation, been
forced to apologize to his tormentors. Had Lebrun
been mobbed at work? Was this the phenomenon Leymann
had in mind? Media reports and the inquest itself
tentatively said it was.
In 2000 and 2001, The National
Post publicized my research on mobbing in the
academic workplace, the process by which even tenured
professors are ganged up on, humiliated, and run out
of their jobs. While trying to make sense of some
bizarre and hugely destructive university conflicts
in 1994, I had stumbled upon Leymann’s work
and found it powerfully illuminating of the data in
my files.
In the meanwhile, the concept of
workplace mobbing caught the attention of the Ontario
Nurses Association, the College Institute Educators
Association of British Columbia, and a smattering
of other union and management groups, which then sponsored
workshops on the topic, much as occurred in Germany
a decade earlier.
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![[The Scapegoat by William Holman Hunt, 1854]](assets/ScapegoatWilliamHolmanHunt.jpg) |
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The Scapegoat
by William Holman Hunt, 1854 |
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The trauma of being mobbed
To describe mobbing as possibly
the gravest threat most workers face is not to ignore
threats posed by slippery floors, dangerous machines,
toxic chemicals, and the other material hazards that
health and safety committees properly make their top
priority.
In practical terms, however, the
worst kind of harm most Canadians have to fear at
work is the kind that arises from faulty human relations,
some kind of glitch in how people treat one another.
Montreal researcher Hans Selye won the Nobel Prize
for Medicine in 1964, for the best single-word description
of today’s main workplace ills: stress. This
short English word struck a chord in both the scientific
community and the public, as mobbing would decades
later, and quickly found its way into other languages.
By now, research has shown in a thousand ways the
stark, even lethal effects of too much of the wrong
kind of stress on physical and mental health.
Mobbing can be understood as the
stressor to beat all stressors. It is an impassioned,
collective campaign by co-workers to exclude, punish,
and humiliate a targeted worker. Initiated most often
by a person in a position of power or influence, mobbing
is a desperate urge to crush and eliminate the target.
The urge travels through the workplace like a virus,
infecting one person after another. The target comes
to be viewed as absolutely abhorrent, with no redeeming
qualities, outside the circle of acceptance and respectability,
deserving only of contempt. As the campaign proceeds,
a steadily larger range of hostile ploys and communications
comes to be seen as legitimate.
Mobbing is hardly the only source
of debilitating stress at work, and it was not the
only one on which Leymann did research. He interviewed
bank employees who had undergone the terror of armed
robbery, and subway drivers who had watched helplessly
as their trains ran over persons who fell or jumped
onto the tracks. Leymann documented the depression,
absenteeism, sleeplessness, and other symptoms of
trauma resulting from such stressful experiences.
Bank robberies and subway suicides
were no match, however, for being mobbed by co-workers
in the personal devastation that ensued. Not infrequently,
mobbing spelled the end of the target’s career,
marriage, health, and livelihood. From a study of
circumstances surrounding suicides in Sweden, Leymann
estimated that about twelve percent of people who
take their own lives have recently been mobbed at
work.
How it happens
Mobbing is relatively rare, and
many workplaces hum along for decades without a single
case of it. But by Leymann’s and others' estimates,
between two and five percent of adults are mobbed
sometime during their working lives. The other 95
percent, involved in the process only as observers,
bystanders, or perpetrators (though occasionally also
as rescuers or guardians of the target), mostly deny,
gloss over, and forget the mobbing cases in which
they took part. That is one reason it has taken so
long for the phenomenon to be identified and researched.
That children and teenagers sometimes
join in collectively humiliating one of their number
is well known--most people can cite examples from
their own school days. The widely publicized deaths
of two girls in British Columbia–Reena Virk,
beaten and drowned in 1999, and Dawn Marie Wesley,
driven to suicide in 2000–have heightened public
awareness of the cruel reality of swarming or collective
bullying among both girls and boys.
Leymann’s contribution was
to document beyond any doubt the same reality among
adults, even in the cool, rational, professional,
bureaucratic, policy-governed setting of a workplace.
The tactics differ. Workplace mobbing is normally
carried out politely, without any violence, and with
ample written documentation. Yet even without the
blood, the bloodlust is essentially the same: contagion
and mimicking of unfriendly, hostile acts toward the
target; relentless undermining of the target’s
self-confidence; group solidarity against one whom
all agree does not belong; and the euphoria of collective
attack.
An example from a factory
One of the cases that first opened
my eyes to workplace mobbing serves also to illustrate
related concepts commonly but mistakenly applied.
A former student of mine asked if he and his wife
could meet with me. She was being sexually harassed,
he said, in the factory where she had worked for most
of her adult life.
The label this woman and her husband
had placed on her problem fit the facts they presented
to me. She was regularly paired for certain tasks
with a male co-worker who day after day humiliated
her with insults to her work and degrading sexual
slurs. Years earlier, when she had threatened to report
him to the boss, he had grabbed her arm in a threatening
manner.
Yet as this shy, soft-spoken lady
shared more facts with me, sexual harassment appeared
to be a very partial characterization of her predicament.
She had in fact complained to both union and management
about the man's offensive behavior, but to no avail.
She and her husband were at wit’s end. The leader
of the union was a paragon of political correctness.
A zero-tolerance policy on sexual harassment was posted
where all could see. Yet her harasser carried on as
before.
Explanation could be found only
in the larger dynamics of the work group. This woman
ranked at the bottom of the pecking order. She was
apart from her workmates in three crucial ways. First,
she had a partial disability, the result of an accident
at work years before, that under terms of the collective
agreement precluded her doing certain jobs. For want
of physical dexterity, she was exempt from tasks at
which everybody else took a turn. She was also paid
at an hourly rate, while most others were on piecework.
Second, though most workers in
the group were from immigrant groups, this woman was
from a different one than everybody else. Ethnically,
she was a minority of one.
Third, while most of her peers
sprinkled their speech with obscenities, took crude
banter in stride, and seemed to thrive on a relatively
coarse workplace culture, this woman did not. She
was devoted to her family and her faith.
These and other factors made her an outcast. Her problem
was far worse than one man’s harassment and
bullying. It was the humiliation of daily loathing
by her peers. What drove her over the edge were comments
from two female co-workers on a hot summer day when
job assignments were being rotated. One called out
so that all could hear, “I don’t want
to work with the cripple.” Another, distributing
sweatbands to combat the heat, passed this worker
by saying, “You don’t work hard enough
to get one.”
At that point, this veteran of
years of co-workers' hostility began crying then and
could not stop. She was taken to the nurse, who sent
her home. Her husband took her to the hospital emergency
room. She was diagnosed with clinical depression and
placed on sick leave. She returned to work months
later, was again paired with the man who led the harassment
and later suffered a severe heart attack. The formal
grievances she had lodged were resolved with her early
retirement about ten years after the mobbing began.
The case illustrates the escalation
that is essential to workplace mobbing. Each higher
level of authority, in both company and union, to
which this woman and her husband appealed, was faced
with overturning the will of a successively larger
group of subordinates. Steadily more and higher-level
employees over time voiced the common sentiment: this
woman is impossible to work with, she has to go.
Mobbing was exacerbated in this
case by its leader's special status in the group.
Some female workers found him sexy. He had connections
for getting cigarettes and alcohol tax-free, and in
this way had forged semi-secret ties with other employees.
Acting in the role of chief eliminator, he led the
campaign to rob one partially disabled worker of her
job, her dignity, and her health. The process took
years, but it eventually achieved its aim.
Mobbing versus other exits
Why didn’t this factory worker
quit? In the answer to this question lie clues to
why mobbing is more common in some employment situations
than others. Mobbing rarely happens to a worker who
can easily relocate to a different employer.
Mobbing is also rare in the case
of workers on at-will contracts, since they can be
summarily fired. A manager faced with ten subordinates
who get along and get work done reasonably well, all
of whom despise a certain other subordinate and want
to be rid of him or her, ordinarily heeds the collective
will. If for some reason the manager does not, there
is conflict but not mobbing, since opinion about the
acceptability of the worker in question is divided.
Further, in situations where a
worker can be terminated only for cause, mobbing seldom
occurs if legitimate cause exists. On the basis of
clear evidence of substandard performance or serious
misconduct, workers are routinely terminated–firmly,
but often with compassion and regret.
The worker most vulnerable to being
mobbed is an average or high achiever who is personally
invested in a formally secure job, but who nonetheless
somehow threatens or puts to shame co-workers and/or
managers. Such a worker provides no legally defensible
grounds for termination, yet usually fails to pick
up subtle hints and leave voluntarily. An attractive
solution, from the majority point of view, is to bring
or wear this worker down, one way or another, however
long it takes.
As the process drags on, both sides,
collective and individual, dig in their heels. It
is often as if the targeted worker has grabbed a hot
wire and cannot let go, despite the pain and injury
it inflicts. The worker’s investment of self
and sense of having been deeply wronged prevent the
one resolution that would satisfy the other side.
Ironically, it is in workplaces
where workers’ rights are formally protected
that the complex and devious incursions on human dignity
that constitute mobbing most commonly occur. Union
shops are one example, as in the case of the factory
worker described above. University faculties are another,
on account of the special protections of tenure and
academic freedom professors have. It happens in police
forces, too, since management rights in this setting
are tempered by the oath officers swear to uphold
the law. Mobbings appear to be much more frequent
in the public service as a whole, as compared to private
companies.
Mobbing also appears to be more
common in the professional service sector–such
as education and health care–where work is complex,
goals ambiguous, best practices debatable, and market
discipline far away. Scapegoating is an effective
if temporary means of achieving group solidarity,
when it cannot be achieved in a more constructive
way. It is a turning inward, a diversion of energy
away from serving nebulous external purposes toward
the deliciously clear, specific goal of ruining a
disliked co-worker's life.
What to do about it
As a clinician, Leymann made his
priority the healing of post-traumatic stress in those
most severely affected by mobbing. With the support
of the Swedish health service, he opened a clinic
for mobbing victims in 1994, and published detailed
research on the first 64 patients treated there. That
clinic no longer exists and Leymann himself died in
1999, but 200 patients are currently treated in a
similar clinic that opened in Saarbruecken, Germany,
this year.
Competent, well-informed treatment
of the many mobbing targets who suffer mental breakdown
is obviously in order, especially since they have
often in the past been misdiagnosed as having paranoid
delusions.
Psychiatric injury, however, is
but one possible harmful result of being mobbed. Some
mobbing targets keep their sanity but succumb to cardiovascular
disease–hypertension, heart attack, or stroke.
Most suffer loss of income and reputation. Marital
breakdown and isolation from friends and family are
also common outcomes.
An ounce of prevention is worth
a pound of cure, although experts do not agree on
the ingredients of the desired ounce. Believers in
human perfectibility favor enacting laws and policies
that forbid workplace mobbing under pain of punishment.
Organizations as diverse as Volkswagen in Germany
and the Department of Environmental Quality in the
American state of Oregon already have anti-mobbing
policies in place. It is too soon to say what effect,
if any, such policies will have on the incidence of
the phenomenon.
The impulse to gang up, to join
with others against what is perceived to be a common
threat, lies deep in human nature. It is not easily
outlawed. A policy forbidding it may, in practice,
become a weapon for convicting some mobbing target
of a punishable offense and thereby aiding in his
or her humiliation. The evidence is clear by now that
policies against sexual harassment have often been
used as tools for harassing innocent but disliked
workmates. Anti-mobbing policies may turn out to be
even more versatile tools for such mischief.
The tiny percentage of mobbing
victims–like Pierre Lebrun–who lash back
in violent attack would probably have lived out their
lives peaceably and productively had they been spared
the excruciating pain of relentless humiliation.
All can agree, at least, on the
desirability of public awareness of the vital but
sad discovery Heinz Leymann made two decades ago,
and on the continuing need for careful, critical scholarship
that builds on his. The better we understand ourselves,
including our darker impulses, the more able we are
to keep one another healthy and safe.
For
Further Reading:
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