A Scoping Review of Bullying and Harassment in Nonprofit and Voluntary Organizations

Margaret Hodgins, Lisa Pursell, Yariv Itzkovich, Sarah MacCurtain, Charlotte Rayner

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Approximately 15% of workers are exposed to bullying in their workplace. However, few studies appear to have been conducted in nonprofit and voluntary organizations. This scoping review explored prevalence and structural and contextual factors that influence bullying in nonprofit and voluntary organizations. From a capture of 671 papers, 54 were assessed for eligibility and 18 full-text articles were reviewed. Bullying is prevalent in nonprofit and voluntary organizations at the same or higher levels as other sectors, with sexual harassment appearing to be a serious problem in the context of fundraising. A synthesis of papers found a suite of factors presented in four themes; complex and unique power relations, the exploitation of virtuosity, the exercise of hegemonic power, and asymmetrical power and extreme dependency, which together act to stabilize the presence of bullying in nonprofit and voluntary organizations. Such dynamics need to be disrupted for intervention to occur. Further research is needed on how volunteers “sense-make” in the face of dissonance between organizational mission and behavior, intervention evaluation, and regulating philanthropic donation to reduce donor dependence.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNonprofit Management and Leadership
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • donor dependence
  • harassment
  • power relations
  • voluntary organizations
  • workplace bullying

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