Research into the glass cliff indicates that adverse company circumstances, compared to favorable ones, increase the likelihood of women to be appointed in leadership positions. Study 1 refined the conditions under which a glass cliff occurs by demonstrating a preference for a female leader when a company's performance was attributed to past leadership (an internal, controllable cause) but not when it was attributed to global economic circumstances (an external, uncontrollable cause). Study 2 replicated the glass cliff for a controllable context and revealed that the female candidate's potential to signal change, rather than her quality and suitability as a leader, accounted for the preference of the female candidate. We conclude that women...
Glass cliffs describe situations in which women are promoted to executive roles in declining organiz...
The glass cliff effect describes a real-world phenomenon in which women are more likely to be appoin...
Research suggests that women are more likely than men to be selected for leadership positions when o...
Research into the glass cliff indicates that adverse company circumstances, compared to favorable on...
PublishedThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via ht...
Research into the glass cliff indicates that adverse company circumstances, compared to favorable on...
Women and members of other underrepresented groups who break through the glass ceiling often find th...
Backgound: About 15 years ago, the term ‘glass cliff’ was coined by management scholars to describe ...
Research into gender and leadership has tended to focus on the inequalities that women encounter whi...
The glass cliff refers to the tendency for women to be more likely than men to be appointed to leade...
Research suggests that women are more likely than men to be selected for leadership positions when o...
Glass cliff effects are context dependent and multiply determined, resulting in mixed evidence and r...
Glass cliffs describe situations in which women are promoted to executive roles in declining organiz...
The glass cliff effect describes a real-world phenomenon in which women are more likely to be appoin...
Research suggests that women are more likely than men to be selected for leadership positions when o...
Research into the glass cliff indicates that adverse company circumstances, compared to favorable on...
PublishedThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via ht...
Research into the glass cliff indicates that adverse company circumstances, compared to favorable on...
Women and members of other underrepresented groups who break through the glass ceiling often find th...
Backgound: About 15 years ago, the term ‘glass cliff’ was coined by management scholars to describe ...
Research into gender and leadership has tended to focus on the inequalities that women encounter whi...
The glass cliff refers to the tendency for women to be more likely than men to be appointed to leade...
Research suggests that women are more likely than men to be selected for leadership positions when o...
Glass cliff effects are context dependent and multiply determined, resulting in mixed evidence and r...
Glass cliffs describe situations in which women are promoted to executive roles in declining organiz...
The glass cliff effect describes a real-world phenomenon in which women are more likely to be appoin...
Research suggests that women are more likely than men to be selected for leadership positions when o...