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The status of internalized prejudice in leader self-development

Mary Hogue (Department of Management and Information Systems, Kent State University–Kent Campus, Kent, Ohio, USA)
Deborah Erdos Knapp (Department of Management and Information Systems, Kent State University–Kent Campus, Kent, Ohio, USA)
Jessica A. Peck (Department of Management, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA)
Velvet Weems-Landingham (Department of Management and Information Systems, Kent State University–Geauga Campus, Burton, Ohio, USA)

Management Decision

ISSN: 0025-1747

Article publication date: 11 October 2022

Issue publication date: 17 April 2023

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Abstract

Purpose

Little research directly examines leader self-development among marginalized workers. The authors offer a framework to explain the role of internalized prejudice in limiting leader self-development, and the authors use that framework to suggest organizational interventions aimed at enhancing leader self-development among marginalized workers.

Design/methodology/approach

The framework is grounded in the incompleteness thesis with its attention to the mutual shaping of culture and mind, and the interventions are drawn from principles of social movements with their focus on changing culture and the minds of individuals. The framework and interventions address the role of status in internalized prejudice.

Findings

Status-related experiences in culture shape status-related thoughts in the mind, resulting in internalized prejudice. Internalized prejudice reduces the status-related behavior of leader self-development, which serves to shape status in the culture. This repeats in an ongoing, recursive process that can be disrupted through organizational interventions. The social movement principles of common purpose and networking can provide new status-related experiences to reduce internalized prejudice, and habit-breaking can stop automatic self-limiting behaviors that can arise from internalized prejudice.

Originality/value

By focusing on status, the authors provide a framework that allows integration of literature across marginalized groups, providing a guide for understanding both commonality and uniqueness of experience. The authors bring principles of social movement to the discussion of leader self-development among marginalized workers as a guide for developing organizational interventions.

Keywords

Citation

Hogue, M., Knapp, D.E., Peck, J.A. and Weems-Landingham, V. (2023), "The status of internalized prejudice in leader self-development", Management Decision, Vol. 61 No. 4, pp. 944-958. https://doi.org/10.1108/MD-06-2021-0779

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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