“…Our work advances current management and organizational research by providing an updated account of how men and women in different organizational settings and occupational roles are described by themselves and others in relation to communal (e.g., warm, empathetic, aware of other's feelings) and agentic (e.g., independent, ambitious, assertive) traits. Because communion comprises a critical set of traits for organizational functioning (Gartzia & Baniandres, 2019; Gartzia & van Engen, 2012; Gartzia & van Knippenberg, 2016; Kark et al., 2012; Rehbock et al., 2021), the confirmation of a persistent communal scarcity of men compared to women in these traits for both self and other reports strongly suggests that a gender perspective should more seriously be incorporated as a critical mechanism that influences organizational traits and behavior across different work roles. These findings also call for a greater theoretical acknowledgment of gender effects on organizational behavior and leadership (e.g., Avolio et al., 2009; Haslam et al., 2010; Yukl, 2006; Zaccaro, 2007) and self and social judgement literature (Abele et al, 2021; Abele & Wojciszke, 2007).…”