Publication | Open Access
The limited impact of reference groups' symbolic gender representation on willingness to coproduce
12
Citations
49
References
2023
Year
Gendered PerceptionBehavioral Decision MakingSocial PsychologySocial CategorizationSocial InfluenceOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesGender IdentityGender StudiesBiasLimited ImpactSymbolic Gender RepresentationGender DiscriminationSocial IdentitySelection BiasGendered ContextReference GroupsApplied Social PsychologyCandidate SelectionFeminist TheoryCentral Reference GroupsPrisoner RehabilitationSociologyRepresentative Bureaucracy LiteratureGender Divide
Abstract Previous literature presents a strong rationale for the positive impact of symbolic representation in coproduction contexts. However, empirical studies yield inconclusive findings indicating that meaningful effects are limited if citizens face high levels of uncertainty. This article combines symbolic representation with signaling theory, suggesting that the representativeness of central reference groups might reduce uncertainty. The theoretical framework suggests that the representation of supervisors and existing coproducers might positively affect citizens' willingness to coproduce. Contrary to the theoretical expectations, the empirical results from two preregistered factorial survey experiments ( n = 2979), situated in prisoner rehabilitation and refugee integration, indicate that the symbolic gender representation of these reference groups has a limited impact. Only a balanced representation of coproducers exhibits a positive treatment effect on citizens' willingness to coproduce. The results oppose central arguments in the representative bureaucracy literature. At least for gender categories, symbolic representation is less important than expected.
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