Kenan-Flagler Business School, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, United States.
Darden School of Business, University of Virginia, United States.
Curr Opin Psychol. 2024 Dec;60:101902. doi: 10.1016/j.copsyc.2024.101902. Epub 2024 Sep 17.
Scholars are increasingly recognizing that allyship affects allies themselves. Although existing scholarship covers a multitude of constructs, most of the literature focuses on social evaluations and their effects on allyship persistence. We posit that the dual focus on social evaluations and allyship persistence has limited the theoretical insights and applied relevance of scholarship on the consequences of allyship for allies. Our review highlights emerging and understudied proximal and distal consequences and possible connections among them to guide future research efforts. We urge scholars to elucidate the distal consequences of social evaluations of allies, further explore understudied proximal and distal consequences, and offer theory as to the nuanced relationships between proximal and distal consequences of allyship for allies.
学者们越来越认识到,盟友关系会影响到盟友自身。尽管现有文献涵盖了众多的概念,但大多数文献都集中在社会评价及其对盟友关系持久性的影响上。我们认为,对社会评价和盟友关系持久性的双重关注,限制了有关盟友关系对盟友影响的理论见解和实际应用的相关性。我们的综述强调了新兴的和研究不足的近端和远端后果,以及它们之间可能存在的联系,以指导未来的研究工作。我们敦促学者阐明对盟友的社会评价的远端后果,进一步探索研究不足的近端和远端后果,并提出关于盟友关系的近端和远端后果之间复杂关系的理论。