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First page of Managing Organizational Deviance<subtitle>Focusing on Causes, Not Symptoms</subtitle>

Organizations experience staggering expenses when employees break rules, behaviors that are variously referred to as acts of organizational deviance, counterproductive work behavior, or organizational misbehavior.1 For example, conservative estimates place the annual cost of internal theft at $6 billion in the U.S. (Wimbush & Dalton, 1997); computer-based loafing behavior, or cyberloafing, costs $600 million annually in the United Kingdom (Taylor, 2007) and upwards of $5.3 billion in the United States (Bennett & Robinson, 2003); and recovery from acts of anger and violence in the workplace cost over $4 billion per year (Bensimon, 1997). It is not surprising that managers are highly motivated to identify ways to control employee deviance given these statistics, and a large body of practical, “self-help” books for managers has sprung up to meet this demand in the last decade (e.g., Bruce, Hampel, & Lamont, 2011; Falcone, 2009; Grote, 2006; Scott, 2006; Shepard, 2005).

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