The term "violence" is multi-facetted. When used in the field of occupational safety and health (OSH) it can be understood according to the definition set out by the International Labour Organization (ILO), which describes violence in the workplace as follows: "Any action, incident or behaviour that departs from reasonable conduct in which a person is assaulted, threatened, harmed, injured in the course of, or as a direct result of, his or her work."
A differentiation is to be made between external violence (caused by customers, clients or visitors) and internal violence (involves colleagues, superiors and subordinates), which in turn is to be differentiated from bullying.
Violence in the workplace primarily takes the form of threats, harassment and insults, but can also involve actual assaults on employees. Threats and attacks in the workplace have increased considerably throughout the EU, with the risk of employees being confronted with violence in the workplace much higher in some sectors than others. High-risk workplaces include building societies and banks, trains and authorities in the legal and social sectors. It is often the case that a number of risk factors coincide, for example:
Bullying in the workplace is extremely stressful for affected employees. In view of inflationary use of the term “bullying”, there is a need for objectivity where this issue is concerned. Clear definition of the term is useful here. We favour the following definition in DGUV publications:
Bullying is confrontational communication which occurs in the workplace amongst colleagues or between superiors and subordinates, and sees
Violence and bullying in the workplace have become key OSH issues. In addition to physical injuries, those affected often suffer a hugely negative impact on their mental health and lose their trust in their social environment. Resultant illness-related absence can also lead to significant microeconomic and macroeconomic losses.
The following measures are amongst those which can be used to prevent violence:
In the workplace: