Publication | Closed Access
Gender and Willingness to Lead: Does the Gender Composition of Teams Matter?
74
Citations
50
References
2020
Year
Gendered PerceptionEducationSocial InfluenceTeam Gender CompositionOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesTeams MatterGender CompositionGender IdentityTeam MembersGender StudiesBiasManagementBehavioral SciencesGendered ContextLeadership AspirationsLeadershipGender DevelopmentGender DivideWork Group Dynamic
Abstract We explore how team gender composition affects willingness to lead by randomly assigning participants in an experiment to male- or female-majority teams. Irrespective of team gender composition, men are substantially more willing than women to lead their team. The pooled sample, and women separately, are more willing to lead female- than male-majority teams. An analysis of mechanisms reveals that a large share of the negative effect of male-majority teams on women's leadership aspirations is accounted for by a negative effect on women's confidence, influence, and expected support from team members.
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