在未来领导者的评估和选择中减少性别偏见:决策者关于领导潜力普遍性的心态的作用。

Zhi Liu, A. Rattan, Krishna Savani
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摘要

大量研究表明,组织决策者在评估和选择领导职位候选人时,更倾向于男性而不是女性。我们提出了一种新的概念——关于领导潜力的普遍性的思维模式——可以帮助减少这种偏见。人们可以认为只有一些人具有很高的领导潜力(即非普遍心态),也可以认为大多数人具有很高的领导潜力(即普遍心态)。五项研究调查了这些心态与决策者在领导评价和选择决策中的性别偏见之间的关系。中国的高级政府官员持有的普遍心态越多,他们在评价下属的领导能力时表现出的性别偏见就越少(研究1)。在英国,持有更普遍心态的在职成年人在评估和选择领导职位的求职者时表现出的性别偏见就越少(研究2)。面对普遍心态的新加坡学生在评估和选择候选人时,比那些面对非普遍心态的学生表现出更少的性别偏见(研究3)。另一项针对中国在职成年人的实验复制了这一模式,并增加了一个控制条件来确认效果的方向性(研究4)。研究5表明,更普遍的心态与更少的性别偏见有关,尤其是在领导领域性别刻板印象更强的决策者中。本研究表明,虽然看起来与性别无关,但关于领导潜力普遍性的心态会影响人们在领导情境中表达性别偏见的程度。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c) 2023 APA,版权所有)。
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Reducing gender bias in the evaluation and selection of future leaders: The role of decision-makers' mindsets about the universality of leadership potential.
Extensive research has documented organizational decision-makers' preference for men over women when they evaluate and select candidates for leadership positions. We conceptualize a novel construct-mindsets about the universality of leadership potential-that can help reduce this bias. People can believe either that only some individuals have high leadership potential (i.e., a nonuniversal mindset) or that most individuals have high leadership potential (i.e., a universal mindset). Five studies investigated the relationship between these mindsets and decision-makers' gender biases in leader evaluation and selection decisions. The more senior government officials in China held a universal mindset, the less they showed gender bias when rating their subordinates' leadership capability (Study 1). Working adults in the United Kingdom who held a more universal mindset exhibited less gender bias when evaluating and selecting job candidates for a leadership position (Study 2). In an experiment, Singaporean students exposed to a universal mindset exhibited less gender bias when evaluating and selecting candidates than those exposed to a nonuniversal mindset (Study 3). Another experiment with working adults in China replicated this pattern and added a control condition to confirm the directionality of the effect (Study 4). Last, Study 5 showed that a more universal mindset was associated with less gender bias particularly among decision-makers with stronger gender stereotypes in the domain of leadership. This research demonstrates that, although they are seemingly unrelated to gender, mindsets about the universality of leadership potential can influence the extent to which people express gender bias in the leadership context. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
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