Abstract
Political conversations are increasingly shaping organizational life, yet management research lacks a unified construct for understanding this phenomenon. We introduce workplace political discourse (WPD): episodic interpersonal communication in organizational settings that explicitly references partisan identities, political actors, or contested public policies. We delineate WPD's conceptual boundaries, distinguish it from six adjacent constructs, and specify three dimensions—behavioral, relational, and content—along which episodes vary. We propose a process model identifying five pathways through which WPD generates organizational consequences: four dysfunctional pathways (identity threat, resource depletion, self-censorship, and grim expectations) and one conditional constructive pathway that operates when communicative action and enabling conditions are present. Emerging evidence suggests that employees self-select into political discussions often with politically similar coworkers, meaning costs fall disproportionately on political minorities who suppress rather than express. We conclude with a research agenda targeting macro-to-micro translation, pathway differentiation, constructive versus dysfunctional conditions, and construct measurement.
Keywords
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
