Birds of a Feather? Exploring Homophily in Nonprofit Leadership

IF 0.2 Q4 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY Journal of Nonprofit Education and Leadership Pub Date : 2022-05-16 DOI:10.18666/jnel-2022-11246
K. Kuenzi, Lindsey Evans, Amanda J. Stewart
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Abstract

Volunteer boards and paid executives have complementary but distinct roles as one supports the other in a nonprofit’s shared leadership function. We introduce the concept of homophily to this relationship, connecting the profile of who fills these roles to how they relate. Homophily conceives those relationships are more likely to form between those who share commonalities, and in this exploratory study, we look at shared characteristics between board members and executives, namely their race and gender. This research illuminates how common or differing identities may affect a board and executive’s shared leadership responsibilities. This research uses descriptive and causal modeling to examine the extent to which nonprofit executives look to boards that are like themselves for support and if homophily or heterophily impacts how an executive perceives their board. The findings reveal a nuanced relationship, indicating homophily may influence these relations differently than previous literature has found.
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物以类聚?探索非营利组织领导的同质性
志愿者委员会和受薪高管在非营利组织的共同领导职能中相互支持,他们的角色互补但又截然不同。我们将同质性的概念引入到这种关系中,将谁担任这些角色的概况与它们之间的关系联系起来。同质性认为这些关系更有可能在那些有共同点的人之间形成,在这项探索性研究中,我们研究了董事会成员和高管之间的共同特征,即他们的种族和性别。这项研究阐明了共同或不同的身份如何影响董事会和高管的共同领导责任。本研究使用描述性和因果模型来检验非营利组织高管向与自己相似的董事会寻求支持的程度,以及同质性或异质性是否会影响高管对董事会的看法。研究结果揭示了一种微妙的关系,表明同质性对这些关系的影响可能与以前的文献发现的不同。
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来源期刊
Journal of Nonprofit Education and Leadership
Journal of Nonprofit Education and Leadership SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
自引率
20.00%
发文量
17
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