Effects of sexism and job-applicant match on leadership candidate evaluations

被引:2
作者
Fleming, Alissa C. [1 ]
Hlebasko, Hanna [1 ]
Adams, Sarah C. [1 ]
Roach, Krystal N. [1 ]
Christiansen, Neil D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Cent Michigan Univ, Coll Liberal Arts & Social Sci, Dept Psychol, 1200 S Franklin St, Mt Pleasant, MI 48858 USA
来源
SOCIAL BEHAVIOR AND PERSONALITY | 2020年 / 48卷 / 09期
关键词
gender; sexism; discrimination; agentic position; communal position; leadership; job applicant; gender stereotypes; ROLE STEREOTYPES; GENDER; WOMEN; PREJUDICE; BACKLASH; SUCCESS;
D O I
10.2224/sbp.8452
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
In the lack of fit model and role congruity theory it is suggested that mismatch between female candidates and agentic, male-typed jobs is responsible for discrimination when women apply for leadership positions. In 2 studies we examined the effects of job-applicant mismatch and evaluator sexism on candidate evaluations. In Study 1 (participant evaluators N = 306), mismatch between a female applicant and an agentic job was beneficial for hireability and competence when the evaluator was male and scored low in sexism. However, we were surprised by the result that female evaluators who scored high in sexism rated female applicants for communal jobs lower on competence, likeability, and hireability than did female evaluators who scored low in sexism. In Study 2 (participant evaluators N = 619), evaluator sexism was related to hireability through competence but not through likeability. Further research should be conducted to explore why sexist women devalue a female candidate who is applying for a communal position.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 21 条
[1]   Another Test of Gender Differences in Assignments to Precarious Leadership Positions: Examining the Moderating Role of Ambivalent Sexism [J].
Acar, F. Pinar ;
Sumer, H. Canan .
APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL REVIEW-PSYCHOLOGIE APPLIQUEE-REVUE INTERNATIONALE, 2018, 67 (03) :498-522
[2]   A Critical Review and Best-Practice Recommendations for Control Variable Usage [J].
Bernerth, Jeremy B. ;
Aguinis, Herman .
PERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 69 (01) :229-283
[3]   If you're going to be a leader, at least act like it! Prejudice towards women who are tentative in leader roles [J].
Bongiorno, Renata ;
Bain, Paul G. ;
David, Barbara .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2014, 53 (02) :217-234
[4]   SEX-ROLE STEREOTYPES - CURRENT APPRAISAL [J].
BROVERMAN, IK ;
VOGEL, SR ;
BROVERMAN, DM ;
CLARKSON, FE ;
ROSENKRANTZ, PS .
JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ISSUES, 1972, 28 (02) :59-78
[5]   The queen bee phenomenon: Why women leaders distance themselves from junior women [J].
Derks, Belle ;
Van Laar, Colette ;
Ellemers, Naomi .
LEADERSHIP QUARTERLY, 2016, 27 (03) :456-469
[6]   Gender-Bias Primes Elicit Queen-Bee Responses Among Senior Policewomen [J].
Derks, Belle ;
Van Laar, Colette ;
Ellemers, Naomi ;
de Groot, Kim .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2011, 22 (10) :1243-1249
[7]  
DeSilver D., 2018, Few women lead large US companies, despite modest gains over the past decade
[8]   Role congruity theory of prejudice toward female leaders [J].
Eagly, AH ;
Karau, SJ .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 2002, 109 (03) :573-598
[9]   Development and validation of Swedish classical and modern sexism scales [J].
Ekehammar, B ;
Akrami, N ;
Araya, T .
SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 41 (04) :307-314
[10]   The Times They Are a-Changing ... or Are They Not? A Comparison of Gender Stereotypes, 1983-2014 [J].
Haines, Elizabeth L. ;
Deaux, Kay ;
Lofaro, Nicole .
PSYCHOLOGY OF WOMEN QUARTERLY, 2016, 40 (03) :353-363