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Authoritarian dynamics and unethical decision making: High social dominance orientation leaders and high right-wing authoritarianism followers.
150
Citations
50
References
2007
Year
Regime AnalysisSocial InfluenceSocial Dominance OrientationPolitical BehaviorUnethical Decision MakingPower RelationOrganizational ConflictOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesLeadership PositionDemocracyManagementOrganizational PsychologyMajority InfluencePolitical PowerAuthoritarianismLeadershipMoral PsychologySociologyBusinessEthical LeadershipAuthoritarian DynamicsLeadership DevelopmentPolitical Science
When dilemmas require trade-offs between profits and ethics, do leaders high in social dominance orientation (SDO) and followers high in right-wing authoritarianism (RWA) make decisions that are more unethical than those made by others? This issue was explored in 4 studies with female participants performing managerial role-playing tasks. First, dyads comprising a person who was either low or high in SDO and a person who was either low or high in RWA negotiated for a leadership position. People high in SDO were more likely to obtain leader positions than to obtain follower positions. No other effects were significant. Second, leaders high in SDO partnered with an agreeable (confederate) follower made decisions that were more unethical than those of leaders low in SDO. Third, followers high in RWA were more acquiescent to and supportive of an unethical (confederate) leader than were followers low in RWA. Fourth, high SDO leader-high RWA follower dyads made decisions that were more unethical than those made in role-reversed dyads because leaders had more influence. Implications of these results for conceptualizing SDO, RWA, and authoritarian dynamics are discussed.
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