Negotiation Contexts: How and Why They Shape Women's and Men's Decision to Negotiate

IF 0.5 4区 管理学 Q4 MANAGEMENT Negotiation and Conflict Management Research Pub Date : 2019-11-01 DOI:10.1111/NCMR.12153
J. Reif, F. A. Kunz, Katharina G. Kugler, F. Brodbeck
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引用次数: 9

Abstract

In the substantial body of research on gender differences in the initiation of negotiation, the findings consistently favor men (Kugler et al., 2018). We propose that this research itself is gendered because negotiation research has traditionally focused on masculine negotiation contexts. In the current study, we replicate the gender effect in initiating negotiations (favoring men) and provide an empirically based selection of “masculine,” “feminine,” and “neutral” negotiation contexts, which can be used for future negotiation research. We show that the negotiation context shapes gender differences such that in specific social contexts, women tend to have even higher initiation intentions compared to men. Negotiation contexts generally seem to differ regarding their affordance to negotiate. We offer a possible explanation for gender effects on initiation intentions by uncovering the mediating role of expectancy considerations across all negotiation contexts, especially in masculine contexts, and instrumentality considerations in specific masculine and feminine contexts.
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谈判语境:它们如何以及为什么影响女性和男性的谈判决定
在关于谈判开始时的性别差异的大量研究中,研究结果始终有利于男性(Kugler等人,2018)。我们认为这项研究本身是性别化的,因为谈判研究传统上侧重于男性谈判环境。在目前的研究中,我们复制了启动谈判中的性别效应(有利于男性),并提供了一个基于经验的“男性”、“女性”和“中性”谈判环境选择,可用于未来的谈判研究。我们发现,谈判环境塑造了性别差异,因此在特定的社会环境中,女性往往比男性有更高的启动意愿。谈判环境似乎在谈判的可承受性方面有所不同。我们通过揭示预期因素在所有谈判环境中的中介作用,特别是在男性环境中,以及在特定的男性和女性环境中的工具性因素,为性别对启动意图的影响提供了可能的解释。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
15.40%
发文量
0
期刊最新文献
Value from Control: Subjective Valuations of Negotiations by Principals and Agents Why are Women Less Likely to Negotiate? The Influence of Expectancy Considerations and Contextual Framing on Gender Differences in the Initiation of Negotiation There is No Away: Where Do People Go When They Avoid an Interpersonal Conflict? Valuing Cooperation and Constructive Controversy: A Tribute to David W. Johnson Issue Information
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