학술논문

Gendered Self-Views Across 62 Countries: A Test of Competing Models
Document Type
Article
Author
Kosakowska-Berezecka, NataszaBosson, Jennifer K.Jurek, PawełBesta, TomaszOlech, MichałVandello, Joseph A.Bender, MichaelDandy, JustineHoorens, VeraJasinskaja-Lahti, IngaMankowski, EricVenäläinen, SatuAbuhamdeh, SamiAgyemang, Collins BaduAkbaş, GülçinAlbayrak-Aydemir, NihanAmmirati, SolineAnderson, JoelAnjum, GulnazAriyanto, AmarinaAruta, John Jamir Benzon R.Ashraf, MujeebaBakaitytė, AistėBecker, MajaBertolli, ChiaraBërxulli, DashamirBest, Deborah L.Bi, ChongzengBlock, KatharinaBoehnke, MandyBongiorno, RenataBosak, JanineCasini, AnnalisaChen, QingweiChi, PeilianCubela Adoric, VeraDaalmans, Serenade Lemus, SoledadDhakal, SandeshDvorianchikov, NikolayEgami, SonokoEtchezahar, EdgardoEsteves, Carla SofiaFroehlich, LauraGarcia-Sanchez, EfrainGavreliuc, AlinGavreliuc, DanaGomez, ÁngelGuizzo, FrancescaGraf, SylvieGreijdanus, HedyGrigoryan, AniGrzymała-Moszczyńska, JoannaGuerch, KeltoumaGustafsson Sendén, MarieHale, Miriam-LinneaHämer, HannahHirai, MikaHoang Duc, LamHřebíčková, MartinaHutchings, Paul B.Jensen, Dorthe HøjKarabati, SerdarKelmendi, KaltrinaKengyel, GabriellaKhachatryan, NarineGhazzawi, RawanKinahan, MaryKirby, Teri A.Kovacs, MonikaKozlowski, DesireeKrivoshchekov, VladislavKryś, KubaKulich, ClaraKurosawa, TaiLac An, Nhan ThiLabarthe-Carrara, JavierLauri, Mary AnneLatu, IoanaLawal, Abiodun MusbauLi, JunyiLindner, JanaLindqvist, AnnaMaitner, Angela T.Makarova, ElenaMakashvili, AnaMalayeri, SheraMalik, SadiaMancini, TizianaManzi, ClaudiaMari, SilviaMartiny, Sarah E.Mayer, Claude-HélèneMihić, VladimirMiloševićĐorđević, JasnaMoreno-Bella, EvaMoscatelli, SilviaMoynihan, Andrew BryanMuller, DominiqueNarhetali, EritaNeto, FélixNoels, Kimberly A.Nyúl, BoglárkaO’Connor, Emma C.Ochoa, Danielle P.Ohno, SachikoOlanrewaju Adebayo, SulaimanOsborne, RandallPacilli, Maria GiuseppinaPalacio, JorgePatnaik, SnigdhaPavlopoulos, Vassilisde León, Pablo PérezPiterová, IvanaPorto, Juliana BarreirosPuzio, AngelicaPyrkosz-Pacyna, JoannaRentería Pérez, EricoRenström, EmmaRousseaux, TiphaineRyan, Michelle K.Safdar, SabaSainz, MarioSalvati, MarcoSamekin, AdilSchindler, SimonSevincer, A. TimurSeydi, MasoumehShepherd, DebraSherbaji, SaraSchmader, ToniSimão, CláudiaSobhie, RositaSobiecki, JurandDe Souza, LucilleSarter, EmmaSulejmanović, DijanaSullivan, Katie E.Tatsumi, MarikoTavitian-Elmadjian, LucyThakur, Suparna JainThi Mong Chi, QuangTorre, BeatrizTorres, AnaTorres, Claudio V.Türkoğlu, BerilUngaretti, JoaquínValshtein, TimothyVan Laar, Colettevan der Noll, JolandaVasiutynskyi, VadymVauclair, Christin-MelanieVohra, NeharikaWalentynowicz, MartaWard, ColleenWłodarczyk, AnnaYang, YapingYzerbyt, VincentZanello, ValeskaZapata-Calvente, Antonella LudmilaZawisza, MagdalenaŽukauskienė, RitaŻadkowska, Magdalena
Source
Social Psychological and Personality Science; September 2023, Vol. 14 Issue: 7 p808-824, 17p
Subject
Language
ISSN
19485506
Abstract
Social role theory posits that binary gender gaps in agency and communion should be larger in lessegalitarian countries, reflecting these countries’ more pronounced sex-based power divisions. Conversely, evolutionary and self-construal theorists suggest that gender gaps in agency and communion should be larger in moreegalitarian countries, reflecting the greater autonomy support and flexible self-construction processes present in these countries. Using data from 62 countries (N= 28,640), we examine binary gender gaps in agentic and communal self-views as a function of country-level objective gender equality (the Global Gender Gap Index) and subjective distributions of social power (the Power Distance Index). Findings show that in more egalitarian countries, gender gaps in agency are smaller and gender gaps in communality are larger. These patterns are driven primarily by cross-country differences in men’s self-views and by the Power Distance Index (PDI) more robustly than the Global Gender Gap Index (GGGI). We consider possible causes and implications of these findings.