Gender and perceptions of leadership effectiveness: A meta-analysis of contextual moderators.
Florida International University · University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Abstract
Despite evidence that men are typically perceived as more appropriate and effective than women in leadership positions, a recent debate has emerged in the popular press and academic literature over the potential existence of a female leadership advantage. This meta-analysis addresses this debate by quantitatively summarizing gender differences in perceptions of leadership effectiveness across 99 independent samples from 95 studies. Results show that when all leadership contexts are considered, men and women do not differ in perceived leadership effectiveness. Yet, when other-ratings only are examined, women are rated as significantly more effective than men. In contrast, when self-ratings only are examined,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 68.83
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 143
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- PsycINFO
- Psychology
- Meta-analysis
- Social psychology
- Perception
- Social perception
- MEDLINE
- Gender equality