“…Although affirmative action programs were originally introduced as an equality-measure to respond to and repair historical discrimination towards minority groups (e.g., Crosby et al, 2003;Heilman & Haynes, 2006;Kelly & Dobbin, 1998), they have stirred substantial debate across scholarly, policy, and public domains. On the one hand, research showed that affirmative hiring policies successfully attract women job candidates (e.g., Ibanez & Riener, 2018;Nater & Sczesny, 2016), on the other hand, female applicants who believed that they had benefited from gender-based preferential selection (compared to merit-based selection) inferred that others held negative expectations of their competence (Heilman & Alcott, 2001), and also devalued their own leadership capability and task performance (Heilman et al, 1987). Furthermore, affirmative action policies can have negative consequences for non-beneficiaries (i.e., men) who might become demotivated or feel that they have been treated unfairly (e.g., Heilman et al, 1996).…”