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Do women followers prefer a different leadership style than men?

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H

Pauksztat, Birgit ; Wittek, Rafael

International Journal of Human Resource Management

2011

22

10

June

2818-2833

child care ; work organization ; workers representation

Netherlands

Workers participation and European works councils

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09585192.2011.580190

English

Bibliogr.

"‘Representative voice' can be defined as actions in which one or more speakers represent others when speaking up about a problem at the workplace or making a suggestion. The purpose of this paper is to introduce the concept of representative voice, assess the frequency of its occurrence and examine department characteristics associated with its frequency. We present a theoretical framework and develop and test hypotheses about the effects of characteristics of the departmental context on the frequency of representative voice. Our focus is on organizational design features, i.e. characteristics that can be directly implemented by management. Data on 40 departments of a large Dutch childcare organization suggested that representative voice occurred in most of the organization's departments, although not frequently. Multilevel analyses showed that representative voice was best predicted by the presence of shared problems. Further, representative voice was more frequent in departments in which employees worked directly with clients (i.e. children), and in larger departments. Frequent contact with the department's manager and among the department's employees had no effect."

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