What is Bullying
Przegląd sekcji
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Repeated behaviour refers to the persistent nature of the behaviour and can involve a range of behaviours over time
Unreasonable behaviour means behaviour that a reasonable person, having regard for the circumstances, would see as unreasonable, including behaviour that is victimising, humiliating, intimidating, or threatening. -
Behaviour, whether intentional or unintentional, that may be considered to be workplace bullying if they are repeated, unreasonable, and create a risk to health and safety
Abusive, insulting, offensive language or comments
Unjustified criticism or complaints
Continuously and deliberately excluding someone from work
Withholding information that is vital for effective work performance
Setting unreasonable timelines or constantly changing deadlines
Setting tasks that are unreasonably below or beyond a person’s skill level
Denying access to information, supervision, consultation, or resources, such that it has a detriment to the worker
Spreading misinformation or malicious rumours
Changing work arrangements, such as rosters and leave, to deliberately inconvenience a particular worker or workers
Excessive scrutiny at work
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A single incident of unreasonable behaviour is not considered to be workplace bullying, however it may have the potential to escalate and should not be ignored.
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