A cross-country comparison of gender traditionalism in business leadership: how supportive are female supervisors?
van Mensvoort, Carly ; Kraaykamp, Gerbert ; Meuleman, Roza ; van den Brink, Marieke
2021
35
4
August
793-814
women workers ; gender roles ; leadership ; supervisor ; comparison
Gender equality & Women
https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017019892831
English
Bibliogr.
"This study investigates whether female supervisors hold less traditional attitudes towards gender in business leadership than male supervisors and non-supervisors, and whether these attitudinal differences vary between countries. It uses the sociological notions of self-interest and exposure and a multilevel approach to advance and expand the investigation of gender attitudes in the domain of business leadership. Two recent waves of the World Values Survey (2005/2009; 2010/2014) for 22 OECD countries were analysed with multilevel logistic regression. Findings indicated less gender traditionalism among female supervisors and among people living in countries with a larger share of women in managerial positions and a less traditional normative climate towards working women. No such attitudinal differences between individuals were found when comparing countries with and without a national legislative gender quota policy. Finally, men's attitudes towards gender traditionalism in business leadership appeared to be more susceptible to the country context than those of women."
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