Mobbing

bullying of an individual by a group

Mobbing is a special type of consensus bullying behavior. It is about an imbalance of social, physical or other power involving a group or a person.

Mobbing is like a "virus" or a "cancer" that spreads via gossip, rumour and innuendo. Mobbing is developed or pushed by a leader who persuades others into a systematic pattern of "mob-like" behaviour toward the target.[1]

History change

Some European languages have adopted "mob" as a loanword to describe special kinds of bullying.[1]

Checklists change

A checklist for identify mobbing behaviour includes[2]

This list is not finished; you can help Wikipedia by adding to it.
  • Group focus on a critical incident that "shows what kind of person the "target" really is"[2]
  • Shared belief that the target needs "to be taught a lesson"[2]
  • Defamation words and reasoning about the target[2]
  • Shared negative ideas about the target[2]
  • Loss of diversity of argument, so that it becomes dangerous to defend the target[2]
  • Addition of the target’s real or imagined mistakes[2]

References change

 
Newspaper headlines about bullying
  1. 1.0 1.1 Shallcross, Linda et al. (2008). "Workplace Mobbing: Expulsion, Exclusion, and Transformation," Archived 2011-07-13 at the Wayback Machine 2008; retrieved 2013-2-20.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 Westhues, Kenneth. Checklist of Mobbing Indicators at arts.uwaterloo.ca Archived 2010-06-13 at the Wayback Machine, 2006; retrieved 2013-2-20.

Other websites change