谁来处理棘手问题?主管的权力感和面对困难的问题

IF 4.8 2区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, SOCIAL Social and Personality Psychology Compass Pub Date : 2024-07-30 DOI:10.1111/spc3.12991
Alexandra Figueroa, Rachael Dailey Goodwin, Cheryl J. Wakslak
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引用次数: 0

摘要

与员工讨论棘手的、有争议的或敏感的问题是有效领导力的一个重要组成部分,但与下属讨论令人不舒服的话题可能会令人生畏,即使是对那些拥有结构性权力的人来说也是如此。区分主管所拥有的结构性权力和他们在情境中感受到的个人权力感,我们在此考虑主管的个人权力感与其面对或回避困难对话的倾向,以及在此类情境中提供社会支持的关系。结合社会角色理论的观点,我们进一步考虑了性别的作用。通过一项初始研究(588 人)和一项后续复制研究(567 人),我们发现,个人权力感预示着主管是否倾向于面对(而不是回避)工作场所中的棘手问题,以及是否倾向于为谈话对象提供社会支持。我们还考虑了这种影响在男性和女性上司之间是否存在差异,发现不同研究的结果并不一致。在研究 1a 中,我们发现权力对女性回避和支持意图的影响小于男性,因此女性(而非男性)更有可能建设性地直面困难问题并提供支持,即使她们觉得自己的个人权力较低。这些效果在研究 1b 中并没有出现。然而,在这两项研究中,我们都发现了性别对社会支持的主效应,即女性在面对困难问题时更有可能提供社会支持。我们推测了这种不一致的原因,并进一步从理论上探讨了个人权力感和性别在解释督导参与困难对话中的作用。
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Who handles the tough talk? Supervisor sense of power and confronting difficult issues
Addressing difficult, controversial, or sensitive issues with employees is a critical component of effective leadership, but discussing uncomfortable topics with subordinates can be daunting, even for those with structural power. Distinguishing between the structural power that supervisors hold, and their situationally felt personal sense of power, we consider here how a supervisor's personal sense of power relates to his or her inclination to confront, or to avoid, difficult conversations, as well as to offer social support in such contexts. Integrating a social role theory perspective, we further consider the role of gender. Across an initial study (N = 588), and a follow‐up replication study (N = 567), we show that personal sense of power predicts supervisor's inclination to confront (and not to avoid) difficult issues in the workplace, as well as to offer social support to the target of conversation. We also consider whether such effects vary across male and female supervisors, finding inconsistent results across studies. In Study 1a, we found that power had less of an effect on the avoidance and support intentions of women than men, such that women (but not men) were more likely to constructively confront the difficult issue head on as well as to offer support, even when they felt low in personal power. These effects did not emerge in Study 1b. However, in both studies, we find a main effect of gender on social support such that women were more likely to provide social support when confronting difficult issues. We speculate about reasons for this inconsistency, and further theorize about the role of personal sense of power and gender in explaining supervisor's engagement in difficult conversations.
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来源期刊
Social and Personality Psychology Compass
Social and Personality Psychology Compass Psychology-Social Psychology
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
2.20%
发文量
59
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