International Journal of

Business & Management Studies

ISSN 2694-1430 (Print), ISSN 2694-1449 (Online)
DOI: 10.56734/ijbms
A Comprehensive Microaggression Model: Integrating Results From Quantitative Research

Abstract


Background: Although overt discrimination has declined, subtle everyday discrimination known as microaggressions (MAs) continues to undermine employee well-being and organisational effectiveness. These behaviours contribute to psychological strain, interpersonal tension, and reduced work performance, making MAs an ongoing organisational concern.

Problem statement: Despite growing research interest, no empirically grounded conceptual model exists that integrates the antecedents, mediators, moderators, and outcomes of workplace MAs based solely on quantitative evidence. This limits theoretical cohesion and hinders the development of targeted, evidence-based interventions.

Methodology: A systematic literature review was conducted following PRISMA 2020 guidelines, focusing exclusively on quantitative studies published between 2015 and 2025. Twenty studies met the inclusion criteria, and data were synthesised to identify verified antecedents, consequences, and conditional mechanisms. The review was registered on the Open Science Framework (OSF).

Results: Findings show that MAs arise from individual, interpersonal, and organisational antecedents such as biased beliefs, discriminatory climates, and leadership-related factors. MAs consistently predict negative psychological, health, work-related, and organisational outcomes. Their effects operate through mediating mechanisms and are conditioned by moderators including ethnicity, military rank, cognitive reappraisal, and identity-related factors.

Conclusion: This review consolidates fragmented quantitative findings into a coherent conceptual model of workplace MAs. The model advances theoretical understanding and provides a practical foundation for designing organisational interventions to identify, address, and mitigate the impact of MAs.