Abstract
This study explores taxicab drivers’ acts of “revenge” and “rescue,” some of which are expressive acts, while others are more instrumental. This article builds on earlier theories of workplace deviance, demonstrating how deviance can serve different purposes and expanding the concept of “deviance admiration” (Heckert and Heckert 2004). It examines deviance in a circumstance – the taxicab industry – which introduces a tension between mandated conformity and necessary deviance: employees must conform to the employers’ rules and yet, to accomplish their jobs well, they need to abandon those rules occasionally. In addition to its theoretical contributions, this work has important practical applications for managers.
Keywords
workplace deviance, taxicab industry, revenge, rescue, management
Date of this Version
2008
DOI
10.1111/j.1475-682X.2008.00240.x
Recommended Citation
Hoffmann, Elizabeth. (2008). “Revenge” and “Rescue”: Workplace Deviance in the Taxicab Industry*. Sociological Inquiry. 78. 270 - 289. 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2008.00240.x.
Comments
This is the accepted version of Hoffmann, Elizabeth. (2008). “Revenge” and “Rescue”: Workplace Deviance in the Taxicab Industry*. Sociological Inquiry. 78. 270 - 289. 10.1111/j.1475-682X.2008.00240.x.