Social inequalities in leadership: shifting the focus from deficient followers to destructive leaders
ISSN: 0025-1747
Article publication date: 21 April 2022
Issue publication date: 17 April 2023
Abstract
Purpose
Existing research on social inequalities in leadership seeks to explain how perceptions of marginalized followers as deficient leaders contribute to their underrepresentation. However, research must also address how current leaders restrict these followers' access to leadership opportunities. This conceptual paper offers the perspective that deficiencies in leaders' behaviors perpetuate social inequalities in leadership through an illustrative application to research on gender and leadership.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors situate existing research on gender and leadership within broader leadership theory to highlight the importance of inclusivity in defining destructive and constructive leadership.
Findings
Previous scholarship on gender inequalities in leadership has focused on perceptions of women as deficient leaders. The authors advocate that researchers reconceptualize leaders' failures to advance women in the workplace as a form of destructive leadership that harms women and organizations. Viewing leaders' discriminatory behavior as destructive compels a broader definition of constructive leadership, in which leaders' allyship against sexism, and any other form of prejudice, is not a rare behavior to glorify, but rather a defining component of constructive leadership.
Practical implications
This paper highlights the important role of high-status individuals in increasing diversity in leadership. The authors suggest that leader inclusivity should be used as a metric of leader effectiveness.
Originality/value
The authors refocus conversations on gender inequality in leadership by emphasizing leaders' power in making constructive or destructive behavioral choices. The authors’ perspective offers a novel approach to research on social inequalities in leadership that centers current leaders' roles (instead of marginalized followers' perceived deficits) in perpetuating inequalities.
Keywords
Citation
Silver, E.R., King, D.D. and Hebl, M. (2023), "Social inequalities in leadership: shifting the focus from deficient followers to destructive leaders", Management Decision, Vol. 61 No. 4, pp. 959-974. https://doi.org/10.1108/MD-06-2021-0809
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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