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Catching up with wonderful women: The women-are-wonderful effect is smaller in more gender egalitarian societies

Authors
Krys, KubaCapaldi, Colin A.van Tilburg, WijnandLipp, Ottmar V.Bond, Michael HarrisVauclair, C. -MelanieManickam, L. Sam S.Dominguez-Espinosa, AlejandraTorres, ClaudioLun, Vivian Miu-ChiTeyssier, JulienMiles, Lynden K.Hansen, KarolinaPark, JoonhaWagner, WolfgangYu, Angela ArriolaXing, CaiWise, RyanSun, Chien-RuSiddiqui, Razi SultanSalem, RadwaRizwan, MuhammadPavlopoulos, VassilisNader, MartinMaricchiolo, FridannaMalbran, MariaJavangwe, GwatireraIsik, IdilIgbokwe, David O.Hur, TaekyunHassan, ArifGonzalez, AnaFulop, MartaDenoux, PatrickCenko, EnilaChkhaidze, AnaShmeleva, EleonoraAntalikova, RadkaAhmed, Ramadan A.
Issue Date
Oct-2018
Publisher
JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
Keywords
Culture; Social cognition; Gender egalitarianism; Gender stereotypes; Implicit attitudes
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, v.53, pp.21 - 26
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY
Volume
53
Start Page
21
End Page
26
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/72682
DOI
10.1002/ijop.12420
ISSN
0020-7594
Abstract
Inequalities between men and women are common and well-documented. Objective indexes show that men are better positioned than women in societal hierarchiesthere is no single country in the world without a gender gap. In contrast, researchers have found that the women-are-wonderful effectthat women are evaluated more positively than men overallis also common. Cross-cultural studies on gender equality reveal that the more gender egalitarian the society is, the less prevalent explicit gender stereotypes are. Yet, because self-reported gender stereotypes may differ from implicit attitudes towards each gender, we reanalysed data collected across 44 cultures, and (a) confirmed that societal gender egalitarianism reduces the women-are-wonderful effect when it is measured more implicitly (i.e. rating the personality of men and women presented in images) and (b) documented that the social perception of men benefits more from gender egalitarianism than that of women.
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