Masculine Conformity and Social Dominance’s Relation With Organizational Culture Change

M. Deng, Adelheid A. M. Nicol, Cindy Suurd Ralph
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Abstract

While the workforce is becoming increasingly more modernized and diverse, masculine norms are prevalent among certain organizations that remain male-dominated. Namely, the military is an institution that promotes masculine stereotypes and a culture where such stereotypes form a normative system of hierarchy. This study, surveying 145 military cadets at the Royal Military College of Canada (RMC), found that social dominance orientation, or preference for in-group superiority and out-group inequality, was associated with higher conformity to masculine norms. Moreover, higher levels of social dominance explained the relationship between masculine conformity and less acceptance toward cultural reforms in the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF). These findings suggest that achieving true organizational culture change in the military involves challenging not only masculine norms but, more importantly, the dominant and nonegalitarian attitudes of social dominance.
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男性从众、社会支配与组织文化变迁的关系
虽然劳动力正变得越来越现代化和多样化,但在某些仍然由男性主导的组织中,男性规范仍然普遍存在。也就是说,军队是一个促进男性刻板印象的机构,也是一种文化,这种刻板印象形成了一种规范的等级制度。这项研究调查了加拿大皇家军事学院(RMC)的145名军校学员,发现社会支配取向,或对群体内优势和群体外不平等的偏好,与更符合男性规范有关。此外,较高的社会支配水平解释了加拿大武装部队(CAF)中男性从众与对文化改革的接受程度较低之间的关系。这些发现表明,在军队中实现真正的组织文化变革不仅需要挑战男性规范,更重要的是,要挑战社会主导地位的主导和非平等主义态度。
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