GENDER-INCLUSIVE GATEKEEPING: HOW (MOSTLY MALE) PREDECESSORS INFLUENCE THE SUCCESS OF FEMALE CEOS

被引:155
|
作者
Dwivedi, Priyanka [1 ]
Joshi, Aparna [2 ]
Misangyi, Vilmos F. [3 ,4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Texas A&M Univ, Mays Business Sch, Management, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
[2] Penn State Univ, Smeal Coll Business, Management, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
[3] Penn State Univ, Smeal Coll Business, Strateg Management, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
[4] Penn State Univ, Smeal Coll Business, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
[5] Penn State Univ, Smeal Coll Business, M&O Dept, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
来源
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL | 2018年 / 61卷 / 02期
关键词
QUALITATIVE COMPARATIVE-ANALYSIS; FIRM PERFORMANCE; GLASS CLIFF; WOMEN; LEADERSHIP; CONSEQUENCES; ORGANIZATION; CORPORATE; MODEL; MEN;
D O I
10.5465/amj.2015.1238
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Male-typed leadership schemas have been widely acknowledged as barriers to women's success in leadership roles. We explore how local organizational agents and contexts enable women leaders to overcome these barriers and achieve success at the highest levels in firms. Specifically, we focus on chief executive officer (CEO) succession events and study how several facets of predecessor CEOs and the succession context combine to influence incoming women's post-succession performance. We conduct a qualitative comparative case study of all CEO successions that involved female successors between 1989 and 2009 across the largest corporations in the United States. Our findings suggest that women's success occurred when a confluence of local firm-level factors and attributes of the (mostly) male predecessors promoted genderinclusive gatekeeping during succession. Our qualitative comparative analysis approach reveal three recipes for female success: "handing over the legacy," "partnering the legacy," and "turning around the legacy." Moreover, a comparison to a matched-sample of men CEO succession events shows that these three recipes for success are unique to women. Based upon our findings, we propose that male predecessors' gender-inclusive gatekeeping facilitates female leaders' success and occurs when local enabling conditions and the embedded context enact agentic and structural mechanisms to alter leadership schemas.
引用
收藏
页码:379 / 404
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] GENDER DISPARITIES IN SCIENCE? DROPOUT, PRODUCTIVITY, COLLABORATIONS AND SUCCESS OF MALE AND FEMALE COMPUTER SCIENTISTS
    Jadidi, Mohsen
    Karimi, Fariba
    Lietz, Haiko
    Wagner, Claudia
    ADVANCES IN COMPLEX SYSTEMS, 2018, 21 (3-4):
  • [22] Female resistance and harmonic convergence influence male mating success in Aedes aegypti
    Aldersley, Andrew
    Cator, Lauren J.
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2019, 9 (1)
  • [23] Female resistance and harmonic convergence influence male mating success in Aedes aegypti
    Andrew Aldersley
    Lauren J. Cator
    Scientific Reports, 9
  • [24] The influence of distinct pollinators on female and male reproductive success in the Rocky Mountain columbine
    Brunet, Johanne
    Holmquist, Karsten G. A.
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2009, 18 (17) : 3745 - 3758
  • [25] Addressing the Gender Pay Gap: The Influence of Female and Male Dominant Disciplines on Gender Pay Equity
    Buckman, David G.
    Jackson, Tommy E.
    JOURNAL OF EDUCATION FINANCE, 2021, 47 (01) : 71 - 91
  • [26] Conforming to and Resisting Dominant Gender Norms: How Male and Female Nursing Students Do and Undo Gender
    McDonald, James
    GENDER WORK AND ORGANIZATION, 2013, 20 (05): : 561 - 579
  • [27] How female x male and male x male interactions influence competitive fertilization in Drosophila melanogaster
    Luepold, Stefan
    Reil, Jonathan Bradley
    Manier, Mollie K.
    Zeender, Valerian
    Belote, John M.
    Pitnick, Scott
    EVOLUTION LETTERS, 2020, 4 (05) : 416 - 429
  • [28] Gender differences and the definition of success: Male and female veterinary students' career and work performance expectations
    Kogan, LR
    McConnell, SL
    Schoenfeld-Tacher, R
    JOURNAL OF VETERINARY MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2004, 31 (02) : 154 - 160
  • [29] PROFESSORS COMMUNICATION STYLES - HOW THEY INFLUENCE MALE AND FEMALE SEMINAR PARTICIPANTS
    HUTCHINSON, LM
    BEADLE, ME
    TEACHING AND TEACHER EDUCATION, 1992, 8 (04) : 405 - 418
  • [30] How female size and male displays influence mate preference in a swordtail
    Wong, Ryan Y.
    So, Peter
    Cummings, Molly E.
    ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 2011, 82 (04) : 691 - 697