加拿大英语招聘环境中带有普通话口音的女性:对温暖的评价能削弱性别公平吗?

IF 2.5 2区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Psychology of Women Quarterly Pub Date : 2023-04-04 DOI:10.1177/03616843231165475
Ivona Hideg, Samantha E. Hancock, W. Shen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管许多工人说话带有非英语口音,但我们对这一现象的理解是有限的,因为以前的工作主要集中在男性身上。这忽略了女性因口音而产生的偏见是否表现得不同。为了解决这一遗漏,我们使用交叉视角来研究与性别传统国家相关的非母语口音如何影响女性的招聘结果。我们认为,有这些口音的女性所面临的偏见是微妙的,因为非母语(与母语)口音与对女性温暖的感知有关(而对男性没有这种影响),因此对可雇佣性的感知更高。然而,我们认为,对可雇佣性的间接影响发生在女性行业,而不是男性行业,这最终会将这些非本地口音的女性推向薪酬较低、声望较高的职业,从而破坏公平。我们在加拿大使用普通话口音进行的三个基于小插曲的实验中发现了对我们假设的支持。管理者和决策者需要意识到有这些非母语口音的女性所经历的潜在偏见,因为口音与更高的温暖度之间的联系可能会损害女性的工作,这一点可能不会立即显现出来。本文的其他在线材料可在PWQ的网站上获得,网址为https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/suppl/10.1177/03616843231165475
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Women With Mandarin Accent in the Canadian English-Speaking Hiring Context: Can Evaluations of Warmth Undermine Gender Equity?
Although many workers speak with a non-native English accent, our understanding of this phenomenon is limited because prior work predominantly focused on men. This overlooks whether the biases women experience due to their accent manifests differently. To address this omission, we use an intersectional lens to examine how non-native accents associated with more gender-traditional countries may affect women's hiring outcomes. We argue that the bias women with these accents face is subtle due to an association of non-native (vs. native) accents with perceptions of women's warmth (whereas there are no such effects for men) and consequently higher perceptions of hireability. Yet we posit that the indirect effect on hireability occurs within feminine, but not masculine, industries, which ultimately undermines equity by pushing women with these non-native accents into lower pay and prestige occupations. We found support for our hypotheses in three vignette-based experiments conducted in Canada using a Mandarin accent. Managers and decision-makers need to be aware of the insidious bias women with these non-native accents experience because it may not be immediately apparent that an association of accent with higher ratings of warmth may undermine women at work. Additional online materials for this article are available on PWQ's website at https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/suppl/10.1177/03616843231165475
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
5.00%
发文量
50
期刊介绍: Psychology of Women Quarterly (PWQ) is a feminist, scientific, peer-reviewed journal that publishes empirical research, critical reviews and theoretical articles that advance a field of inquiry, teaching briefs, and invited book reviews related to the psychology of women and gender. Topics include (but are not limited to) feminist approaches, methodologies, and critiques; violence against women; body image and objectification; sexism, stereotyping, and discrimination; intersectionality of gender with other social locations (such as age, ability status, class, ethnicity, race, and sexual orientation); international concerns; lifespan development and change; physical and mental well being; therapeutic interventions; sexuality; social activism; and career development. This journal will be of interest to clinicians, faculty, and researchers in all psychology disciplines, as well as those interested in the sociology of gender, women’s studies, interpersonal violence, ethnic and multicultural studies, social advocates, policy makers, and teacher education.
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