Who Gets the Benefit of the Doubt? The Impact of Causal Reasoning Depth on How Violations of Gender Stereotypes Are Evaluated

Autor(en)
Steffen Keck, Linda Babcock
Abstrakt

A large body of research demonstrates that women encounter severe penalties for violating gender stereotypes. In this paper, we explore the conditions under which the reverse is truewhen being subject to a stereotype can actually benefit a woman compared to a man who is not subject to the same stereotype. In particular, we suggest that in situations of causal ambiguityuncertainty about the reasons that a behavior occurreddifferences in how men and women are evaluated will be moderated by the extent to which observers engage in a low or a high level of deliberative causal reasoning. In 3 experimental studies, participants were asked to make judgments about an employee who violated a female gender stereotype by failing to provide help to a coworker when asked to do so, but the reasons for this behavior were unclear. When participants were prompted to engage in deliberative causal reasoning, women were evaluated more positively than men, but not in the absence of such a prompt. Moreover, when participants did engage in deliberative causal reasoning, the more positive evaluations of women compared to men were driven by participants' beliefs that women's behavior was due more to situational constraints than the same behavior by men.

Organisation(en)
Institut für Rechnungswesen, Innovation und Strategie
Externe Organisation(en)
Carnegie Mellon University
Journal
Journal of Organizational Behavior
Band
39
Seiten
276-291
Anzahl der Seiten
16
ISSN
0894-3796
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/job.2218
Publikationsdatum
03-2018
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ÖFOS 2012
501002 Angewandte Psychologie, 501015 Organisationspsychologie
Schlagwörter
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Psychology(all), Applied Psychology, Sociology and Political Science, Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
Link zum Portal
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/de/publications/who-gets-the-benefit-of-the-doubt-the-impact-of-causal-reasoning-depth-on-how-violations-of-gender-stereotypes-are-evaluated(ef58340f-a658-4656-9d51-5bbc5ad1a474).html