Toxic: A Guide to Rebuilding Respect and Tolerance in a Hostile Workplace

I was excited by the premise of this book, promising to be ‘a guide to rebuilding respect and tolerance in a hostile workplace’ as there do seem to be far too many hostile workplaces. Also, I’ve seen the long-lasting negative impact on people who work in that kind of environment and it is a problem worth addressing.

I was excited by the premise of this book, promising to be ‘a guide to rebuilding respect and tolerance in a hostile workplace’ as there do seem to be far too many hostile workplaces. Also, I’ve seen the long-lasting negative impact on people who work in that kind of environment and it is a problem worth addressing.

This book made me think and helped provide a structure for my thinking on this, providing a good exploration of the factors that have led to the rise of the toxic workplace including an erosion of trust, industrial relations, resilience, the five-generation workplace, technology, corporate scandals, CEO tenure, the gig economy, sleep deprivation and several others!

There is a good exploration of the symptoms of a toxic workplace, including rewarding mediocre performance, employees avoiding disagreements with managers for fear of reprisal, personal agendas taking precedence over the long-term well-being of the company, and high employee turnover. Clive Lewis’s then defines the ‘toxic triad’ of conditions involving the organisation, line managers and employees that allow toxicity to flourish and shares a lot of practical behavioural tips that can address many of the issues. The book continues to dive deeper into the toxic triad, exploring how to address organisation systems, line management capability and the attitude of the employee.

I only skim-read the section citing Dr Norman Vincent Peale on ‘The Power of Positive Thinking’ and I would much prefer to see the inclusion of evidence-based approaches from decades of Positive Psychology research (although I am aware that other views are available).

There is a really powerful exploration of toxic leadership, citing Whicker’s definition of toxic leaders as “bullies, enforcers and streetfighters. They are maladjusted, malcontent and often malevolent and malicious people who succeed by tearing others down and glory in turf protection and controlling others. They have a deep-seated but well-disguised sense of personal inadequacy, selfish values and cleverness at concealing deceit. They can, by virtue of their destructive behaviours and dysfunctional personal qualities, inflict serious and enduring harm on the individuals, organisations, communities or even nations that they lead”

I’ve often said that organisations tend to get the culture they deserve, and what you choose to celebrate (and tolerate) has an impact. Toxic leadership is a problem, and on that I know many organisations feel poorly equipped to address. This book should help you both appreciate the importance of addressing it, and provide ideas for how to actually do it.

Published by Bloomsbury or Globis Mediation Group

Ian Pettigrew, Kingfisher Coaching

Read more

Latest News

Read More

What happens if you lose in small claims court

3 September 2025

Business Transformation

3 September 2025

What employees really think about becoming an employee-owned company

Employee ownership is on the rise in the UK. With over 1,800 employee-owned businesses now operating across sectors as diverse as manufacturing, healthcare and professional...

Employee Engagement

3 September 2025

How to deliver bad news and get a good outcome

Delivering bad news is never easy and the moment that we accept and own that we will be delivering bad news, our amygdala (emotional brain)...
Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

Sheffield Hallam University – Directorate of Human Resources and Organisational Development – Employee Relations TeamSalary: £39,906 to £44,746 per annum depending on experience (Grade 7)

Ravensbourne University London – People & CultureSalary: From £76,162 per annum

University of Plymouth – Human Resources – HR Business PartneringSalary: £35,608 to £38,784 per annum (Grade 6)

City & Guilds of London Art SchoolSalary: Competitive

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE