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Motives relate to cooperation in social dilemmas but have an inconsistent association with leadership evaluation
Wolff, Christian; Keith, Nina (2019): Motives relate to cooperation in social dilemmas but have an inconsistent association with leadership evaluation, in: Bamberg: opus, doi: 10.20378/irbo-55231.
Faculty/Chair:
Author:
Publisher Information:
Year of publication:
2019
Pages:
Source/Other editions:
Scientific Reports, 9 (2019), S. 14. - ISSN: 2045-2322
Language:
English
Remark:
Datei enthält "Supplementary Information"
DOI:
Abstract:
A common assumption is that good leaders are driven by a power motive that motivates them to influence others. However, leaders need to restrain themselves in social dilemmas where cooperation maximizes collective outcomes. We theorize that in social dilemmas, a desire for positive relationships (affiliation motive) is more beneficial than a power motive because it draws attention away from short-term self-interest towards understanding others. In a game of Settlers of Catan in the laboratory, we find that a functional variant of the affiliation motive relates to verbal encouragement of cooperation, to fewer occurrences of oil spills, to higher ratings of transformational leadership and, in a field survey, to fewer selfish business decisions. Furthermore, a dysfunctional variant of the power motive relates to two of three indicators of selfishness. Group members perceive selfish individuals as assuming leadership roles which indirectly relates to slightly higher ratings of transformational leadership. This pattern of evaluation may privilege men who, on average, show more selfish behaviour which can be partially attributed to their motives. Mere awareness of gender-based discrimination does not enable raters to circumvent this pattern of evaluation. This work suggests a need for interventions that increase appreciation of cooperative leaders.
GND Keywords: ; 
Führungspsychologie
Kooperativer Führungsstil
Keywords:
Kooperation, Geschlecht, Soziale Dilemmata
DDC Classification:
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Peer Reviewed:
Yes:
International Distribution:
Yes:
Open Access Journal:
Yes:
Type:
Article
Activation date:
August 5, 2019
Project(s):
Permalink
https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/45852