Research suggests that women are more likely than men to be selected for leadership positions when organizations are in a performance crisis, a phenomenon labeled the glass cliff. Two scenario studies demonstrate that the glass-cliff effect is attenuated when organizational stakeholders support the decision to appoint a new leader (i.e., indicating that the new leader can rely on social resources). The glass-cliff effect remains when this decision is not fully supported (i.e., indicating that the new leader is unable to rely on social resources). This moderation seems driven by beliefs that men are more likely to possess agentic leadership traits and women more communal leadership traits. When there is no performance crisis, these gendered ...
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...
Women’s representation in senior leadership positions continues to be significantly lower than that ...
Research suggests that women are more likely than men to be selected for leadership positions when o...
In two scenario-based studies, we found that women and men evaluate glass-cliff positions (i.e., pre...
This chapter provides an overview of recent findings showing that stereotypical gendered beliefs abo...
Research into the glass cliff indicates that adverse company circumstances, compared to favorable on...
Research into the glass cliff indicates that adverse company circumstances, compared to favorable on...
The glass cliff suggests that women are more likely to access leadership positions when organization...
Research into gender and leadership has tended to focus on the inequalities that women encounter whi...
Once women break through the glass ceiling they must overcome the glass cliff, where women are more ...
Glass cliff effects are context dependent and multiply determined, resulting in mixed evidence and r...
Glass cliff effects are context dependent and multiply determined, resulting in mixed evidence and r...
Purpose - This paper aims to investigate the phenomenon of the glass cliff, whereby women are more l...
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...
Women’s representation in senior leadership positions continues to be significantly lower than that ...
Research suggests that women are more likely than men to be selected for leadership positions when o...
In two scenario-based studies, we found that women and men evaluate glass-cliff positions (i.e., pre...
This chapter provides an overview of recent findings showing that stereotypical gendered beliefs abo...
Research into the glass cliff indicates that adverse company circumstances, compared to favorable on...
Research into the glass cliff indicates that adverse company circumstances, compared to favorable on...
The glass cliff suggests that women are more likely to access leadership positions when organization...
Research into gender and leadership has tended to focus on the inequalities that women encounter whi...
Once women break through the glass ceiling they must overcome the glass cliff, where women are more ...
Glass cliff effects are context dependent and multiply determined, resulting in mixed evidence and r...
Glass cliff effects are context dependent and multiply determined, resulting in mixed evidence and r...
Purpose - This paper aims to investigate the phenomenon of the glass cliff, whereby women are more l...
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...
Women’s representation in senior leadership positions continues to be significantly lower than that ...