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Settles, Isis H.; Cortina, Lilia M.; Buchanan, NiCole T.; Miner, Kathi N. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2013
In the current study of 353 science and engineering faculty members, we examined whether three types of gender-based mistreatment might "chill" individuals' perceptions of the professional climate, which might in turn undermine satisfaction with their jobs. We also tested gender differences in these relationships. Results indicated that…
Descriptors: Job Satisfaction, College Faculty, Science Education, Engineering Education
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Glick, Peter; Fiske, Susan T. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
It is close to 20 years since the authors began the collaboration that led to ambivalent sexism theory and its associated measure, both reviewed in their 1997 "Psychology of Women Quarterly" article, "Hostile and Benevolent Sexism: Measuring Ambivalent Sexist Attitudes Toward Women." This article reports the development and validation of the…
Descriptors: Females, Gender Discrimination, Gender Bias, Periodicals
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Connelly, Kathleen; Heesacker, Martin – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2012
Previous research suggests that benevolent sexism is an ideology that perpetuates gender inequality. But despite its negative consequences, benevolent sexism is a prevalent ideology that some even find attractive. To better understand why women and men alike might be motivated to adopt benevolent sexism, the current study tested system…
Descriptors: Females, Gender Bias, Gender Discrimination, Ideology
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Backus, Faedra R.; Mahalik, James R. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
Our study explored the relationship between feminist identity and women's report of an ideal male partner's conformity to masculine gender role norms. Heterosexual, mostly White, college women (N = 183) completed measures assessing feminist beliefs and the masculinity characteristics of an ideal male partner. Results indicated that feminist…
Descriptors: Feminism, Social Behavior, Females, Sex Role
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Latu, Ioana M.; Stewart, Tracie L.; Myers, Ashley C.; Lisco, Claire G.; Estes, Sarah Beth; Donahue, Dana K. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
In two studies, we investigated implicit gender stereotypes of successful managers. Using an adaptation of the Implicit Association Test (IAT) named the Successful Manager IAT (SM-IAT) in Study 1, we found that male participants were more likely to implicitly associate men with successful manager traits and women with unsuccessful manager traits…
Descriptors: Women Administrators, Sex Stereotypes, Work Environment, Employee Attitudes
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Good, Jessica J.; Moss-Racusin, Corinne A.; Sanchez, Diana T. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2012
Across two studies, we tested whether perceived social costs and benefits of confrontation would similarly predict confronting discrimination both when it was experienced and when it was observed as directed at others. Female undergraduate participants were asked to recall past experiences and observations of sexism, as well as their confronting…
Descriptors: Gender Bias, Gender Discrimination, Conflict, Females
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Liss, Miriam; Erchull, Mindy J. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2010
Research findings raise questions about whether the feminist identity development model provides information about women's social identification as a feminist. Specifically, the penultimate stage, Synthesis, has been theorized to capture when feminist identity formation coalesces and women take on the feminist label. However, available data have…
Descriptors: Feminism, Identification, Females, Self Concept
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Elacqua, Tina C.; Beehr, Terry A.; Hansen, Curtiss P.; Webster, Jennica – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2009
The glass ceiling refers to the difficulty of women trying to be promoted into the top management levels. The present study examined managers' potential explanations, implicit or explicit, for why women rarely reach the top hierarchical levels in their own organization. Among 685 managers at a large Midwestern insurance company, a model was…
Descriptors: Gender Discrimination, Females, Promotion (Occupational), Administrator Attitudes
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Sibley, Chris G.; Overall, Nickola C. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
We tested a dual process motivational model of ambivalent sexism and gender differences in intimate partner preferences. Meta-analysis of 32 samples (16 with men, 16 with women; N = 5,459) indicated that Benevolent Sexism (BS) in women was associated with greater preferences for high-resource partners (r = 0.24), whereas Hostile Sexism (HS) in men…
Descriptors: Females, Gender Discrimination, Gender Differences, Gender Bias
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Konrath, Sara; Au, Josephine; Ramsey, Laura R. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2012
Women are visually depicted with lower facial prominence than men, with consequences for perceptions of their competence. The current study examines the relationship between the size of this "face-ism" bias (i.e., individual or micro-level sexism) and a number of gender inequality indicators (i.e., institutional or macro-level sexism) at the…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Gender Bias, Gender Discrimination, Human Body
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Kaiser, Cheryl R.; Hagiwara, Nao – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2011
This investigation examined whether gender identification moderates women's working memory following exposure to situations that threaten the integrity of their gender group. Young adults read sentences that either threatened women's gender identity (in the social identity threat condition) or did not threaten this identity (in the control…
Descriptors: Sentences, Females, Self Concept, Integrity
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Exposito, Francisca; Herrera, M. Carmen; Moya, Miguel; Glick, Peter – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2010
We examined how Spanish women's benevolent sexism (a sex-role attitude) affects their perceptions of whether a hypothetical husband will feel threatened by a wife's success at work. In a social perception study, female participants (N = 210) read a vignette in which a husband and his wife argued over her job promotion. Women's benevolent sexism…
Descriptors: Family Violence, Females, Social Cognition, Gender Discrimination
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Foster, Mindi D. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2009
This study provides evidence that the effects of perceived pervasive discrimination may be dynamic over time. It was expected that participants who perceived discrimination to be highly pervasive would initially be more likely to engage in inactive coping strategies than those who perceived low pervasiveness; however, those who continued to…
Descriptors: Coping, Gender Discrimination, Females, Adults
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Szymanski, Dawn M.; Owens, Gina P. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2009
The purpose of this study was: (1) to examine concurrently the relationship between heterosexist events and sexist events and psychological distress and (2) to investigate sexual orientation-based and gender-based group-level coping as potential moderators of the heterosexism-distress and sexism-distress links among 282 lesbian and bisexual women.…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, Feminism, Females, Sexual Orientation
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Lewis Hall, M. Elizabeth; Christerson, Brad; Cunningham, Shelly – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2010
The present study explored gender harassment in the context of Christian higher education. Specifically, we examined ways in which the theologically based gender schemas in these settings might affect the experiences of harassment among male and female faculty. A questionnaire containing measures of harassment and two aspects of institutional…
Descriptors: Women Faculty, Access to Information, Organizational Climate, Gender Discrimination
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