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- W2620237301 abstract "Glass-cliff research shows that female leaders are preferentially selected in a crisis to signal change and not for their leadership qualifications. In parallel, the management literature urges for agentic “masculine” leadership to turn around organizations in crisis. We hypothesized that, regardless of their gender, agentic leaders should be preferred to communal leaders if leadership qualifications and actual change potential motivate leader selection. Three experimental studies demonstrated that agentic (vs. communal) candidates were perceived to match poorly-performing (vs. strongly-performing) companies. This effect was accounted for by perceptions of agentic candidates' higher suitability, higher task-orientation (versus person-orientation), and higher change potential. We discuss that women face ambiguity as to why they become leaders in crisis contexts: because they are perceived as signaling change, stereotypically linked to their gender, or for their perceived agentic qualities as leaders. In contrast, men become crisis leaders due to their perceived agentic change potential." @default.
- W2620237301 created "2017-06-05" @default.
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- W2620237301 date "2018-04-01" @default.
- W2620237301 modified "2023-10-01" @default.
- W2620237301 title "Solving the crisis: When agency is the preferred leadership for implementing change" @default.
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- W2620237301 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.leaqua.2017.05.003" @default.
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