Dataset for: Daldrop, C., Buengeler, C., & Homan, A. C. (2022) An Intersectional Lens on Leadership: Prescriptive Stereotypes towards Younger Women and Younger Men and their Effect on Leadership Perception
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Daldrop, Christoph
Buengeler, Claudia
Homan, Astrid C.
Abstract / Description
Younger men and especially younger women are excluded from leadership roles or obstructed from succeeding in these positions by facing backlash. Our project aims to build a more gender-specific understanding of the backlash that younger individuals in leadership positions face. We predict an interactive backlash for younger women and younger men that is rooted in intersectional stereotypes compared to the stereotypes based on single demographic categories (i.e., age or gender stereotypes). To test our hypotheses, we collect data from a heterogeneous sample (N = 900) of U.S. citizens between 25 and 69 years. We conduct an experimental online study with a between-participant design to examine the backlash against younger women and younger men.
Dataset for: Daldrop, C., Buengeler, C., & Homan, A. C. (2022). An Intersectional Lens on Leadership: Prescriptive Stereotypes towards Younger Women and Younger Men and their Effect on Leadership Perception. PsychArchives. https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5404
Dataset for: Daldrop, C., Buengeler, C., & Homan, A. C. (2023). An intersectional lens on young leaders: bias toward young women and young men in leadership positions. In Frontiers in Psychology (Vol. 14). Frontiers Media SA. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.120454
Research has recognized age biases against young leaders, yet understanding of how gender, the most frequently studied demographic leader characteristic, influences this bias remains limited. In this study, we examine the gender-specific age bias toward young female and young male leaders through an intersectional lens. By integrating intersectionality theory with insights on status beliefs associated with age and gender, we test whether young female and male leaders face an interactive rather than an additive form of bias. We conducted two preregistered experimental studies (N1 = 918 and N2 = 985), where participants evaluated leaders based on age, gender, or a combination of both. Our analysis reveals a negative age bias in leader status ascriptions toward young leaders compared to middle-aged and older leaders. This bias persists when gender information is added, as demonstrated in both intersectional categories of young female and young male leaders. This bias pattern does not extend to middle-aged or older female and male leaders, thereby supporting the age bias against young leaders specifically. Interestingly, we also examined whether social dominance orientation strengthens the bias against young (male) leaders, but our results (reported in the SOM) are not as hypothesized. In sum, our results emphasize the importance of young age as a crucial demographic characteristic in leadership perceptions that can even overshadow the role of gender.
Persistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2022-10-06
Publisher
PsychArchives
Is referenced by
Citation
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Intersectional Lens on Leaders_Study_Rawdata.csvCSV - 527.82KBMD5: 869638e8ba832e649198ca3ad096ce23Description: Raw Data File
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Intersectional Lens on Leaders_Study_Data.savSPSS data file - 119.38KBMD5: c04d88eff7b0da757e70150c0cd754caDescription: Data File (SPSS)
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Intersectional Lens on Leaders_Study_Description.jsonUnknown - 10.43KBMD5: 77cc5576d452316f137ce107ed5840bbDescription: Study Description (done with DataWiz)
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Intersectional Lens on Leaders_Study_Codebook.jsonUnknown - 87.51KBMD5: 8675c005edfa44d1a51b818fce4b5e77Description: Codebook (done with DataWiz)
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There are no other versions of this object.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Daldrop, Christoph
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Buengeler, Claudia
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Homan, Astrid C.
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2022-10-06T16:57:00Z
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Made available on2022-10-06T16:57:00Z
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Date of first publication2022-10-06
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Abstract / DescriptionYounger men and especially younger women are excluded from leadership roles or obstructed from succeeding in these positions by facing backlash. Our project aims to build a more gender-specific understanding of the backlash that younger individuals in leadership positions face. We predict an interactive backlash for younger women and younger men that is rooted in intersectional stereotypes compared to the stereotypes based on single demographic categories (i.e., age or gender stereotypes). To test our hypotheses, we collect data from a heterogeneous sample (N = 900) of U.S. citizens between 25 and 69 years. We conduct an experimental online study with a between-participant design to examine the backlash against younger women and younger men.en
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Abstract / DescriptionDataset for: Daldrop, C., Buengeler, C., & Homan, A. C. (2022). An Intersectional Lens on Leadership: Prescriptive Stereotypes towards Younger Women and Younger Men and their Effect on Leadership Perception. PsychArchives. https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5404en
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Abstract / DescriptionDataset for: Daldrop, C., Buengeler, C., & Homan, A. C. (2023). An intersectional lens on young leaders: bias toward young women and young men in leadership positions. In Frontiers in Psychology (Vol. 14). Frontiers Media SA. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.120454en
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Abstract / DescriptionResearch has recognized age biases against young leaders, yet understanding of how gender, the most frequently studied demographic leader characteristic, influences this bias remains limited. In this study, we examine the gender-specific age bias toward young female and young male leaders through an intersectional lens. By integrating intersectionality theory with insights on status beliefs associated with age and gender, we test whether young female and male leaders face an interactive rather than an additive form of bias. We conducted two preregistered experimental studies (N1 = 918 and N2 = 985), where participants evaluated leaders based on age, gender, or a combination of both. Our analysis reveals a negative age bias in leader status ascriptions toward young leaders compared to middle-aged and older leaders. This bias persists when gender information is added, as demonstrated in both intersectional categories of young female and young male leaders. This bias pattern does not extend to middle-aged or older female and male leaders, thereby supporting the age bias against young leaders specifically. Interestingly, we also examined whether social dominance orientation strengthens the bias against young (male) leaders, but our results (reported in the SOM) are not as hypothesized. In sum, our results emphasize the importance of young age as a crucial demographic characteristic in leadership perceptions that can even overshadow the role of gender.en
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Review statusunknownen
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/7527
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.8236
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Language of contenteng
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PublisherPsychArchivesen
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Is referenced byhttps://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1204547
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Is related tohttps://www.psycharchives.org/handle/20.500.12034/7526
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Is related tohttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5404
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleDataset for: Daldrop, C., Buengeler, C., & Homan, A. C. (2022) An Intersectional Lens on Leadership: Prescriptive Stereotypes towards Younger Women and Younger Men and their Effect on Leadership Perceptionen
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DRO typeresearchDataen