Murray Gregg R, Carroll Bruce A
Department of Social Sciences, Augusta University, Augusta, GA, United States.
Georgia Gwinnett College, Lawrenceville, GA, United States.
Front Psychol. 2020 Sep 15;11:576278. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.576278. eCollection 2020.
Females constitute a far smaller proportion of political leaders than their proportion in the general population. Leading demand- and supply side explanations for this phenomenon account for some of the variance but leave a great deal unexplained. In an effort to account for additional variance, this research evaluates the issue informed by the biological theory of evolution by natural selection, a foundational explanation for the diversity and function of living organisms. It experimentally assesses how varying types of inter- and intragroup threat-a recurring ancestral problem-affect demand for female and male national leaders. This work analyzes data collected from individuals ( = 826) in the U.S. during the 2012 Cooperative Congressional Election Study. The results suggest the predominant preference for male over female leaders in some contexts may be the non-adaptive and non-functional but lingering outcome of an adaptive preference for physically formidable allies that was shaped by natural selection in ancestral environments.
在政治领导人中,女性所占比例远低于其在总人口中的比例。针对这一现象,从需求和供给方面给出的主要解释说明了部分差异,但仍有大量差异无法解释。为了解释更多差异,本研究依据自然选择的生物进化理论对该问题进行评估,这是对生物多样性和功能的一种基础性解释。研究通过实验评估了不同类型的群体间和群体内威胁(这是一个反复出现的祖传问题)如何影响对女性和男性国家领导人的需求。这项工作分析了在2012年美国国会合作选举研究期间从826名个体收集的数据。结果表明,在某些情况下,相较于女性领导人,对男性领导人的主要偏好可能是在祖先环境中由自然选择塑造的对身体强壮的盟友的适应性偏好所产生的非适应性、无功能性但依然存在的结果。