委派还是不委派:性别在委派的情感关联和行为反应上的差异

To Delegate or Not to Delegate: Gender Differences in Affective Associations and Behavioral Responses to Delegation

ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2017
被引 107
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究发现女性领导者比男性更难委派任务,因为她们将委派视为更具支配性,从而产生更多负面情绪和内疚感,导致委派更少且与下属互动质量更低。

Abstract

Effectively delegating work to others is considered critical to managerial success, as it frees up managers’ time and develops subordinates’ skills. We propose that female leaders are less likely than male leaders to capitalize on these benefits of delegating. Although delegation has communal (e.g., relational) and agentic (e.g., assertive) properties, we argue that female leaders, as compared to male leaders, find it more difficult to delegate tasks due to gender-role incongruence. In five studies, we draw upon social role and backlash theories to show that women imbue delegation with more agentic traits, have more negative associations with delegating, and feel greater guilt about delegating than men. These associations result in women delegating less than men and, when they do delegate, having lower-quality interactions with subordinates. We further show that reframing delegation as communal attenuates women’s negative associations with delegation. These findings reveal that even when a given behavior has both agentic and communal elements, perceptions of agency can undermine women’s engagement in them. However, emphasizing the communal nature of seemingly agentic acts may encourage women’s engagement in such critical leadership behaviors. These findings have theoretical and practical implications for research on gender differences and leadership behavior in the workplace.

性别差异领导力组织行为学社会心理学