Dictionary Definition
insubordination
Noun
1 defiance of authority [ant: subordination]
2 an insubordinate act [syn: rebelliousness]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -eɪʃǝn
Noun
insubordination
- The quality of being insubordinate; disobedience to lawful authority.
Translations
The quality of being insubordinate
- Finnish: tottelemattomuus, niskoittelu
Extensive Definition
Insubordination is the act of a subordinate
deliberately disobeying a lawful order. A lawful order is a
directive from a legitimate representative of an organization, a
person who has been designated as having the authority to issue the
order, to a subordinate within the
organization who is expected to carry out the directive as part of
his or her duties within the organization.
Refusing to perform an action that is not ethical
or legal is not insubordination. Refusing to perform an action that
is not within the scope of authority of the person issuing the
order is not insubordination.
Insubordination is typically a punishable offense
in hierarchical
organizations which depend on people lower in the chain of
command to do as they are told.
Military
The concept of insubordination is most often associated with military organizations, as military organizations have a chain of command and lawful orders given by a commissioned officer (CO) or noncommissioned officer (NCO) are expected to be carried out by the person to whom the order is given. Refusal of a military officer to obey his (civilian) superiors would also count, though in some nations the head of the government is (at least technically) also the most superior officer of the military (see for example Commander in Chief).Economy
Other types of hierarchical structures,
especially corporations, may also use insubordination as a reason
for dismissal
or censure of an
employee.
There have been a number of court cases in the
United
States which have involved charges of insubordination from the
employer with counter charges of infringement of First
Amendment rights from the employee. A number of these cases
have reached the U.S.
Supreme Court usually involving a conflict between an
institution of higher
education and a faculty
member.
In the modern workplace in the Western
world, hierarchical power relationships are usually
sufficiently internalized so that the issue of formal charges of
insubordination are rare. In his book, Disciplined Minds, American
physicist and writer Jeff Schmidt points out that professionals are
trusted to run organisations in the interests of their employers.
Because employers cannot be on hand to manage every decision,
professionals are trained to “ensure that each and every detail of
their work favours the right interests – or skewers the disfavoured
ones” in the absence of overt control.
Examples
There have been a number of famous and infamous
people who have committed insubordination or publicly objected to
an organizational practice.
- Douglas MacArthur - US General who was relieved of command by President Harry S. Truman during the Korean Conflict.
- Jackie Robinson - US baseball player was accused of insubordination while in the military but was exonerated at a court martial.
- Howard Zinn - historian who was fired for insubordination
- Albert Pike - charged by the Confederate Army with insubordination
- Nicholas Jonathan Calvert - DAL employee who dared to resign
- George Grosz - soldier in German Army, World War I, and an artist
- Eugene Debs - labor organizer and member of Socialist Party
- Jeffrey Wigand - VP of Brown & Williamson who revealed tobacco industry practices
- Billy Mitchell - famous aviator, United States Army Air Corp commander during World War I and proponent of air power during the interwar years
- Hunter S. Thompson - famous writer fired from Time Magazine
- Thomas Scott (Orangeman) executed by Louis Riel because of this crime
See also
- Mutiny
- Whistle blower
- Criticism
- Court
cases involving insubordination:
- Rendell-Baker v. Kohn, 457 U.S. 830 (1982 US Supreme Court)
- Schenck v. United States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919 US Supreme Court)
- Perry v. Sindermann, 408 U.S. 593
insubordination in Danish:
Lydighedsnægtelse
insubordination in German: Insubordination
insubordination in French: Insoumission
insubordination in Hebrew: סרבנות
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
civil disobedience, disobedience, frowardness, indiscipline, indocility, infraction, infringement, interregnum, intractability, irresponsibility,
lawbreaking,
lawlessness,
license, licentiousness, mutiny, naughtiness, noncompliance, nonconformity, noncooperation, nonobedience, passive
resistance, power vacuum, rampant will, recusancy, transgression, unaccountability,
uncontrol, uncooperativeness,
unduteousness,
undutifulness,
unrestraint,
unsubmissiveness,
violation, waywardness, willful
disobedience, willfulness