Vial Andrea C, Napier Jaime L
Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States.
Department of Psychology, New York University Abu Dhabi, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
Front Psychol. 2018 Oct 15;9:1866. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01866. eCollection 2018.
Although leader role expectations appear to have become relatively more compatible with stereotypically feminine attributes like empathy, women continue to be highly underrepresented in leadership roles. We posit that one reason for this disparity is that, whereas stereotypically feminine traits are appreciated as nice "add-ons" for leaders, it is stereotypically masculine attributes that are valued as the defining qualities of the leader role, especially by men (who are often the gatekeepers to these roles). We assessed men's and women's idea of a great leader with a focus on gendered attributes in two studies using different methodologies. In Study 1, we employed a novel paradigm in which participants were asked to design their "ideal leader" to examine the potential trade-off between leadership characteristics that were more stereotypically masculine (i.e., agency) and feminine (i.e., communality). Results showed that communality was valued in leaders only after meeting the more stereotypically masculine requirements of the role (i.e., competence and assertiveness), and that men in particular preferred leaders who were more competent (vs. communal), whereas women desired leaders who kept negative stereotypically masculine traits in check (e.g., arrogance). In Study 2, we conducted an experiment to examine men's and women's beliefs about the traits that would be important to help them personally succeed in a randomly assigned leader (vs. assistant) role, allowing us to draw a causal link between roles and trait importance. We found that both men and women viewed agentic traits as more important than communal traits to be a successful leader. Together, both studies make a valuable contribution to the social psychological literature on gender stereotyping and bias against female leaders and may illuminate the continued scarcity of women at the very top of organizations, broadly construed.
尽管领导者角色期望似乎已变得相对更符合诸如同理心等传统女性特质,但女性在领导角色中的代表性仍然极低。我们认为造成这种差异的一个原因是,虽然传统女性特质被视为领导者不错的“附加品”,但被视为领导者角色决定性特质的却是传统男性特质,尤其是男性(他们往往是这些角色的把关者)。我们在两项采用不同方法的研究中,重点关注性别化特质,评估了男性和女性对优秀领导者的看法。在研究1中,我们采用了一种新颖的范式,要求参与者设计他们的“理想领导者”,以检验在更具传统男性特质(即能动性)和女性特质(即社群性)的领导特征之间可能存在的权衡。结果表明,只有在满足了该角色更具传统男性特质的要求(即能力和坚定自信)之后,社群性才会在领导者身上受到重视,而且男性尤其更喜欢更有能力(而非更具社群性)的领导者,而女性则希望领导者能抑制负面的传统男性特质(如傲慢)。在研究2中,我们进行了一项实验,以检验男性和女性对于有助于他们在随机分配的领导者(而非助手)角色中个人取得成功的特质的看法,从而使我们能够在角色与特质重要性之间建立因果联系。我们发现,无论是男性还是女性,都认为能动性特质对于成为一名成功的领导者比社群性特质更重要。这两项研究共同为关于性别刻板印象和对女性领导者的偏见的社会心理学文献做出了宝贵贡献,并且可能揭示了在广义上的组织高层中女性持续稀缺的现象。