1990
DOI: 10.1111/j.1559-1816.1990.tb00384.x
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Legitimizing the Leader: Endorsement by Male Versus Female Authority Figures

Abstract: Subjects viewed a videotaped group discussion by a leader and four other group members and evaluated each of them for leadership competence. The leader, either a man or a woman, was either personally endorsed (“legitimized”) or unendorsed by either a male or a female authority figure. Legitimation raised both leaders' performance evaluations. Legitimation by the female authority affected the leaders' evaluations, overall, as much as legitimation by a male authority. For the male leader, legitimation by the mal… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…It is possible that Clara and Jill, as senior women who refuse to conform to the conventionally masculine norms associated with leadership (Ely 1988; Hearn and Parkin 1988; Geis, Brown and Wolfe 1990; Maher 1997; Sinclair 1998), are effectively contesting the related widespread expectation that workplaces (and especially those concerned with technology and IT) should be regarded as uncompromisingly masculine domains (cf. Tannen 1994b; Trauth 2002; Kendall 2003), where male patterns of interaction serve as the unmarked model.…”
Section: Exploiting Normative Femininitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is possible that Clara and Jill, as senior women who refuse to conform to the conventionally masculine norms associated with leadership (Ely 1988; Hearn and Parkin 1988; Geis, Brown and Wolfe 1990; Maher 1997; Sinclair 1998), are effectively contesting the related widespread expectation that workplaces (and especially those concerned with technology and IT) should be regarded as uncompromisingly masculine domains (cf. Tannen 1994b; Trauth 2002; Kendall 2003), where male patterns of interaction serve as the unmarked model.…”
Section: Exploiting Normative Femininitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Another sub-culture for future study is male-dominated professions and work environments. Scott and Brown (2006) and Geis et al (1990) show that in these environments, men succumb to anti-female perceptions. Would the egalitarian views of millennial men change in such environments?…”
Section: Implications Of Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Relationships with authority figures can strongly influence successful advancement [57], and in criminal justice settings, the transition back into the community. Anecdotal evidence suggests that drug-involved women leaving prison often rate the relationship with their PO higher in importance than their relationship with their treatment counselor.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%