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Reversing the gender gap in negotiations: An
exploration of stereotype regeneration
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- Kray, L.J., Galinsky, A. & Thompson, L. (2002).
Reversing the gender gap in negotiations: An exploration of
stereotype regeneration. Organizational Behavior and Human
Decision Processes, 87 (2), 386-409.
Abstract
We examine how gender stereotypes affect performance in
mixed-gender negotiations. We extend recent work demonstrating
that stereotype activation leads to a male advantage and a
complementary female disadvantage at the bargaining table (Kray,
Thompson, & Galinsky, in press). In the present investigation,
we regenerate the stereotype of effective negotiators by
associating stereotypically feminine skills with negotiation
success. In Experiment 1, women performed better in mixed-gender
negotiations when stereotypically feminine traits were linked to
successful negotiating, but not when gender-neutral traits were
linked to negotiation success. Gender differences were mediated by
the performance expectations and goals negotiators set. In
Experiment 2, we regenerated the stereotype of effective
negotiators by linking stereotypically masculine or feminine
traits with negotiation ineffectiveness. Women outperformed men in
mixed-gender negotiations when stereotypically masculine traits
were linked to poor negotiation performance, but men outperformed
women when stereotypically feminine traits were linked to poor
negotiation performance. Implications for stereotype threat theory
and negotiations are discussed.
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