My Fair Lady? Inferring Organizational Trust From the Mere Presence of Women in Leadership Roles.

Mansi P Joshi, Amanda B Diekman
Author Information
  1. Mansi P Joshi: Indiana University Bloomington, USA. ORCID
  2. Amanda B Diekman: Indiana University Bloomington, USA.

Abstract

The history of male dominance in organizational hierarchy can leave a residue of mistrust in which women in particular do not expect fair treatment. The mere presence of a female leader relative to a male leader led perceivers to anticipate fairer treatment in that organization (Study 1) and greater projected salary and status (Study 2). This mere presence effect occurred uniquely through communal and not agentic affordances; these patterns emerged especially or only for women. Female leaders cued organizational trust in both male- and female-dominated industries (Study 3) and when they occupied different levels of the organizational hierarchy (Study 4). When information about organizational communal affordances is directly communicated, both female and male leaders signal trust (Study 5). The processes and practices of male-dominated organizational culture can leave a residue of mistrust, but viewing women in leadership is one beacon illuminating paths forward and upward.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Female
Humans
Leadership
Male
Organizational Culture
Trust
Women

Word Cloud

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