Toyol at the Desk: Cultural Narratives and Islamic HRM Approaches to Workplace Integrity
Authors
Albukhary International University, Alor Setar, Kedah (Malaysia)
International Open University, Kanifing (Gambia)
Addien Integrated Islamic School, Alor Setar, Kedah (Malaysia)
Article Information
DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.100400128
Subject Category: Cultural Studies
Volume/Issue: 10/4 | Page No: 1672-1685
Publication Timeline
Submitted: 2026-04-06
Accepted: 2026-04-12
Published: 2026-04-30
Abstract
This research explores the metaphorical application of the Toyol, a Malay folklore spirit thief, as an interpretive lens to covert workplace deviance in Malaysian organizations. Underpinned by symbolic anthropology and Islamic Human Resource Management (HRM), the study investigates how the "Toyol mentality" is used by employees to explain behavior such as time theft, electronic free-riding, and unethical self-enrichment. Using qualitative interview, digital ethnography, and Islamic text analysis methods, the study demonstrates how the cultural metaphor facilitates veiled criticism of unethical practice and mirrors underlying organizational blind spots. The research suggests that Islamic ethical values of amanah (trust), adl (justice), ihsan (excellence), and hisbah (accountability), provide spiritually underpinned alternatives to procedural ethics. Yet, HR systems neglect these values and do not operationalize them into actionable systems. The research prescribes an Islamically-coherent, culturally-appropriate HRM ethics template that aligns local metaphor and theological teaching with training, appraisal, and disciplinary practices. By renegotiating folklore as moral tale rather than superstition, the research presents a new approach to the reconstruction of workplace integrity in Muslim-majority cultures.
Keywords
Toyol metaphor, workplace misconduct
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References
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