1 in 2 Canadians have experienced bullying in the workplace

| Filed under: National, Social Issues
CC Image courtesy of Judit Klein: https://bit.ly/2OHxZe6

1 in 2 Canadians experienced bullying in the workplace

Older Canadians more likely to experience workplace bullying than younger Canadians

Toronto, Nov 12th - In a random sampling of public opinion taken by The Forum Poll™ among 1875 Canadians 16 years of age or older, over half (55%) say that they, a co-worker, or both have been bullied in the workplace. 

Older Canadians experienced more bullying in the workplace than younger Canadians. Of those between the ages of 55-64, almost two-thirds (61%) reported that either they, and/or a coworker, have been bullied in the workplace.

Compared to the younger population, more than half (57%) of those between the ages of 25-34 reported that either they, and/or a coworker, have been bullied in the workplace.

A large majority (67%) of respondents who self-identified as disabled stated that they have been bullied, a co-worker or both in the workplace (compared to 53%).

 

Only 1 in 3 employers took action to end bullying

1 in 2 (52%) reported the bullying to management, senior staff, human resources, or another person or department responsible for employee conduct.

However, only about a third of employers (35%) took action to end the bullying. 

 

Majority of employers did not take action to end bullying for LGBTQ2SIAP+ or the disabled

7 out of 10 (71%) who identified as a member of the LGBTQ2SIAP+ community (n= 85) did not have an employer who took action to end the bullying (compared to 64%). 3 out of 4 (75%) of those who identified as disabled did not have an employer who took action to end the bullying (compared to 63%).

 

Employers who took action to end bullying addressed the bullying effectively

Of the respondents whose employers took action to end the bullying, two-thirds (TOP2: 67%) stated their employer’s actions addressed the bullying effectively. Of the few respondents who identify as a member of the LGBTQ2SIAP+community (n=23), more than half (BTM2: 53%) do not believe their employer’s actions addressed the bullying.


Today’s youth appear to experience more bullying than previous generation 

Over 1 in 3 (38%) Canadians were the target of bullying while attending school.

1 in 2 respondents (50%) who are between the ages of 25-34 were the target of bullying while attending school.

However, 1 in 3 respondents (30%) between the ages of 55-64 and 1 in 6 respondents (17%) 65 years and over were the target of bullying while attending school.

Over half (57%) of Canadians who identified as a member of the LGBTQ2SIAP+ community experienced bullying while in school compared to over a third (37%) who do not identify with the community.

 

Verbal bullying most common

When asked what type of bullying they have personally experienced the most, more than half of respondents (58%) have experienced verbal bullying and almost a quarter (21%) experienced physical. One-fifth (19%) experienced emotional bullying. Cyber bullying (2%) is the Cyber bullying (2%) is the most uncommon.

 

Disabled and LGBTQ2SIAP+ communities experienced higher level of bullying

1 in 4 respondents who identified as disabled were more likely to be physically bullied (27%) or emotionally bullied (26%) than compared to those who did not identify as disabled (20% physical, 17% emotional).

Of the few respondents from the LGBTQ2SIAP+ community (n=93), 1 in 4 experienced emotional bullying (26%) compared to 1 in 6 who did not identify (17%).

 

Previous generations more likely to have been physically bullied  

While older Canadians were less likely to be bullied while attending school, they were more likely to experience physical bullying than younger Canadians.

One third (35%) of those 55 to 64 experienced physical bullying in school.

Younger respondents reported experiencing less physical bullying. Only 1 in 7 (14%) of those aged between 25-34 experienced physical bullying.

Nearly 1 in 3 males (31%) experienced physical bullying compared to 1 in 10 (10%) females. Similarly, nearly 1 in 3 females (29%) experienced emotional bullying compared to 1 in 10 males (9%).

 

Younger respondents more likely to report bullying

Respondents were asked if the bullying was reported to a teacher or school staff member and over a third (36%) reported the bullying.

Younger respondents were more likely to report the bullying than older respondents. 4 in 10 (43%) between the ages of 25-34 reported the bullying compared to only 1 in 5 (21%) between the ages of 55-64.

 

Majority of people who bully do not face consequences

Respondents were then asked if the person bullying them faced any consequences after was reported.

Three quarters (75%) stated that the person bullying them did not face any consequences after it was reported.

A vast majority of those who identified as disabled (86%) stated that the person who bullied them did not face any consequences after the bullying was reported.

 

School bullying less likely to be reported and school bullies less likely to see consequences than workplace bullying and bullies

Only a third (36%) of those that were bullied said they reported the bullying to a teacher or staff member, with those 16-24 (53%) far more likely to report bullying than those 65 and over (14%).

Only a quarter (25%) said their school bully faced consequences after the report.

Half (52%) of those bullied in the workplace said they reported the bullying, with a third (35%) saying the employer took action to end the bullying.

 

Over half believe school policies are not effective against bullying

When asked how effective their school’s policies were on bullying, over half of the respondents (TOP2: 52%) did not believe the policies were effective.

Over a quarter (BTM2: 28%) believed their school’s policies on bullying were either very effective or somewhat effective while the remaining 20% were ‘not sure’.

Nearly two thirds (65%) of respondents who identified as a member of the LGBTQ2SIAP+ community and nearly 6 in 10 (59%) who self-identified as disabled expressed that their school’s policies on bullying were ineffective.

 

2 out of 3 Canadians have policies related to bullying in the workplace

Two-thirds of Canadians (66%) stated their employer has policies related to bullying in the workplace

Those who self-identified as disabled are less likely to have an employer with policies related to bullying (54%, compared to 68%).

 

6 out of 10 Canadians believe workplace bullying policies are effective

A majority of Canadians (TOP 2: 63%) believed that their employer’s policies on bullying were effective.

Male respondents were more likely to rate their employer’s policies on bullying as effective (TOP 2: 67%) than females (TOP 2: 59%).

Those who self-identified as disabled are less likely to rate their employer’s policies on bullying as effective (TOP 2: 53%, compared to TOP2: 65%).

 

“While younger Canadians are experiencing bullying in school at a higher rate than previous generations, it’s far less likely to be physical in nature,” said Dr. Lorne Bozinoff, President of Forum Research. “Half of Canadians say they’ve personally experienced bullying in the workplace or know someone that’s been bullied in the workplace; and Canadians that identify with disability are particularly vulnerable, as they are less likely than others to work for an employer with anti-bullying policies.”

Lorne Bozinoff, Ph.D. is the president and founder of Forum Research. He can be reached at lbozinoff@forumresearch.com or at (416) 960-9603.