领导力中的种族差异:国家橄榄球联盟教练晋升中的绩效奖励偏见

Christopher I. Rider, James B. Wade, A. Swaminathan, A. Schwab
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引用次数: 9

摘要

尽管美国劳动力日益多样化,并努力增加少数族裔在领导层中的代表性,但组织领导人仍以白人为主。我们认为,绩效奖励偏见(即同等绩效的较低奖励)通过抑制少数族裔相对于同等表现的白人晋升到被认为是组织领导的先决条件的职位的比率,从而导致领导方面的种族差异。对1985年至2012年间1200多名国家橄榄球联盟教练的职业历史分析支持了这一说法。各种固定效应规格保持教练的初始和当前职位不变,使我们能够将绩效奖励偏见与分配机制区分开来,这种分配机制将少数人(在聘用和离职后)与晋升前景较差的职位相匹配。我们还研究了一项联盟范围内的政策实施前后的种族差异,该政策明确旨在增加少数民族对领导职位的面试。尽管主教练比例的差异在实施后有所减少,但实施前的人口趋势使我们无法最终将这种增加归因于该政策。更明确的是,在实施后,白人助理教练的晋升率继续高于表现相似的少数族裔助理教练。此外,与我们的论点一致,白人在晋升率方面的优势是特定于从较低级别职位过渡到晋升总教练(即协调员)之前通常占据的职位;在这个职位上的人没有明显的种族优势。我们的结论是,组织领导中的种族差异在很大程度上归因于低级别职位的绩效奖励偏见。
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Racial Disparity in Leadership: Performance-Reward Bias in Promotions of National Football League Coaches
Organizational leaders remain predominantly white despite increasing U.S. workforce diversity and efforts to increase racial minority representation in leadership. We propose that performance-reward bias (i.e., lesser rewards for equivalent performance) generates racial disparity in leadership by suppressing the rate at which minorities, relative to equally-performing whites, are promoted to positions considered prerequisite for organizational leadership. Career history analyses of over 1,200 National Football League coaches from 1985 to 2012 support this claim. Various fixed-effects specifications hold constant a coach’s initial and current position, enabling us to differentiate performance-reward bias from allocative mechanisms that match minorities, at hire and post-hire, to positions with inferior upward mobility prospects. We also examine racial disparity before and after implementation of a league-wide policy explicitly designed to increase the number of minorities interviewed for leadership positions. Although the disparity in head coach representation decreased after implementation, pre-implementation demographic trends prevent us from conclusively attributing this increase to the policy. Less equivocally, after implementation white assistant coaches continued to be promoted at higher rates than similarly-performing minority ones. Moreover, consistent with our arguments, this white advantage in promotion rates is specific to the transition from lower level positions to the one typically occupied prior to promotion to head coach (i.e., coordinators); no racial advantage is evident among occupants of this position. We conclude that racial disparity in organizational leadership is largely attributable to performance-reward bias in lower level positions.
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