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Side effects of gender‐fair language: How feminine job titles influence the evaluation of female applicants
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Citations
35
References
2012
Year
Gendered PerceptionGender StereotypicalityMale BiasSocial SciencesGender IdentityFeminine Job TitlesGender StudiesBiasSide EffectsGender DiscriminationSexismFeminist ScholarshipGendered ContextIntersectionalityFeminist TheoryGender StereotypeFeminist PhilosophyMasculinity StudiesGender‐fair LanguageSexuality StudiesFictitious Job TitlesSociologyGender EconomicsGender DivideArtsGender Roles
Abstract In many languages, feminization has been used as a strategy to make language more gender‐fair, because masculine terms, even in a generic function, exhibit a male bias. Up to date, little is known about possible side effects of this language use, for example, in personnel selection. In three studies, conducted in Polish, we analyzed how a female applicant was evaluated in a recruitment process, depending on whether she was introduced with a feminine or masculine job title. To avoid influences from existing occupations and terms, we used fictitious job titles in Studies 1 and 2: diarolożka (feminine) and diarolog (masculine). In Study 3, we referred to existing occupations that varied in gender stereotypicality. In all studies, female applicants with a feminine job title were evaluated less favorably than both a male applicant (Study 1) and a female applicant with a masculine job title (Studies 1, 2, and 3). This effect was independent of the gender stereotypicality of the occupation (Study 3). Participants' political attitudes, however, moderated the effect: Conservatives devaluated female applicants with a feminine title more than liberals (Studies 2 and 3). Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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