| Literature DB >> 36090312 |
Nilupulee Liyanagamage1, Mario Fernando1, Belinda Gibbons1.
Abstract
This paper examines the emotional processes in Machiavellian leadership. The leadership literature portrays Machiavellians as 'dark' individuals that engage in unethical actions, causing employee dissatisfaction, distress, emotional exhaustion and high turnover. However, research has seldom questioned the processes behind these unethical and negative outcomes. This study explores Machiavellian emotional processes at multiple levels-within-persons and relational levels (between-persons and interpersonal interactions in organisations). In this study, emotions and leadership are not explored in isolation but as social processes that occur in relationships between leaders and employees in evolving organisational settings. This study draws on 20 participants from four large multi-national construction firms in Sri Lanka. Open-ended semi-structured interviews were conducted to explore the emotions of Machiavellians in organisations. The findings suggest that Machiavellianism influences leader and employee emotional processes. Furthermore, the emotional processes, influenced by Machiavellianism, appear to facilitate the development of leader and employee relationships and emotional experiences at within-persons and relational levels in organisations.Entities:
Keywords: Emotions; Global South; Machiavellian leadership; Relational process
Year: 2022 PMID: 36090312 PMCID: PMC9449947 DOI: 10.1007/s10551-022-05233-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bus Ethics ISSN: 0167-4544
Demographic and organisational information of participants (leaders and employees) in construction sites (N = 20)
| Site no | Leader/ employee status | Name | Age | Gender | Highest level of education | Machiavellian Personality* | Organisational position | Relationship with leader |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Leader | Ian | 41 | Male | BSc Civil Engineering | High Mach | Project manager | - |
| Employee | Charles | 32 | Male | National Vocational Qualification | Low Mach | Construction manager | 3 years | |
| Employee | Travis | 30 | Male | BSc Civil Engineering | High Mach | Project engineer | 5 years | |
| Employee | Anton | 51 | Male | Diploma | High Mach | Mechanical foreman | 3 years | |
| Employee | Patrick | 47 | Male | Advanced Level | Low Mach | Technical officer | 1 year | |
| Employee | Vivian | 28 | Female | Diploma in Building Construction | Low Mach | Supervisor | 1 year | |
| 2 | Leader | Uday | 52 | Male | BSc Civil Engineering | High Mach | Project manager | – |
| Employee | Claire | 34 | Female | BSc Civil Engineering | Low Mach | Quality assurance and control Engineer | 2 years | |
| Employee | Chris | 37 | Male | Diploma in Building | Low Mach | Civil engineer | 1.5 years | |
| Employee | Pravish | 27 | Male | National Diploma in Technology | Low Mach | Assistant mechanical engineer | 2 years | |
| Employee | Mike | 29 | Male | Higher Diploma in Quantity Surveying | Low Mach | Assistant quantity surveyor | 1.5 years | |
| 3 | Leader | Stuart | 53 | Male | Charted Engineer | Low Mach | Project director | – |
| Employee | Ivon | 42 | Male | BSc Mechanical Engineering | Low Mach | Engineer | 2 years | |
| Employee | Bernard | 34 | Male | Charted Engineer | Low Mach | Engineering manager | 4 years | |
| Employee | Kenny | 43 | Male | National Diploma | Low Mach | Site manager | 2 years | |
| Employee | Paul | 26 | Male | BSc Civil Engineering | Low Mach | Planning engineer | 2 years | |
| 4 | Leader | Thomas | 51 | Male | Chartered Engineer | Low Mach | Ass gm construction | – |
| Employee | Brian | 31 | Male | BSc Civil Engineering | High Mach | Civil engineer | 6 years | |
| Employee | Kalva | 33 | Male | BSc Civil Engineering | Low Mach | Quality assurance and control Engineer | 1 year | |
| Employee | Aziz | 26 | Male | BSc Civil Engineering | Low Mach | Civil engineer | 1.5 years |
*Machiavellian personality of participants was measured using the MACH IV survey by Christie and Geis (1970). High Machs scored 60 and over; low Machs scored less than 60 in the MACH IV survey
A sample illustration of the coding framework developed from the thematic data analysis
| Main theme | Sub-theme | Illustrate quote |
|---|---|---|
| Within-person level emotions | ||
| Expressing emotions | Avoid expressing emotions | |
| Express negative emotions | ||
| Express positive emotions | ||
| Coping with emotions | Suppression | |
| Mood management | ||
| Display anger | ||
| Consequences of emotions | Affect the mind | |
| Well-being | ||
| Consequences on others | ||
| Relational level emotions (i.e. between-persons, interpersonal interactions at organisational level) | ||
| Emotional contagion | Positive spread of emotions | |
| Negative spread of emotions | ||
| Emotional sharing | ||
| Impact of emotional contagion | Employee positive emotions | |
| Employee negative emotions | ||
| Distrust | ||
| Trust | ||
| Contextual level | ||
| Organisational | Organisational hierarchy | |
| Office setting | ||
| National | Respect | |
| Power distance | ||
| Religion | ||
Fig. 1Framework for emotional processes of Machiavellians