Group Size and Its Impact on Diversity-Related Perceptions and Hiring Decisions in Homogeneous Groups

IF 4.9 2区 管理学 Q1 MANAGEMENT
Aneesh Rai, Edward H. Chang, Erika L. Kirgios, Katherine L. Milkman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Why do some homogeneous groups face backlash for lacking diversity, whereas others escape censure? We show that a homogeneous group’s size changes how it is perceived and whether decision makers pursue greater diversity in its ranks. We theorize that people make different inferences about larger groups than smaller ones—with consequences for diversity management—due to Bayesian reasoning. This can produce sensitivity to a lack of diversity in large groups and limited sensitivity to a lack of diversity in small groups. Because each group member represents the outcome of a hiring decision, larger homogeneous groups signal a diversity problem more strongly than smaller homogeneous groups. Across three preregistered experiments (n = 4,283), we show that decision makers are more likely to diversify larger homogeneous groups than smaller ones and view larger homogeneous groups as (i) more likely to have resulted from an unfair selection process; (ii) less diverse; (iii) more likely to face diversity-related impression management concerns; and (iv) less open to the influence of newly added underrepresented members. Further, (i)–(iii) mediate the relationship between homogeneous group size and decisions to diversify. We extend our findings to S&P 1500 corporate boards, showing that larger homogeneous boards are more likely to add women or racial minorities as directors. Larger homogeneous boards are also rarer than expected, whereas smaller homogeneous boards are surprisingly abundant. This suggests that decision makers neglect homogeneity in smaller groups, while investing extra effort toward diversifying larger homogeneous groups. Our findings highlight how group size shapes diversity-related perceptions and decisions and identify mechanisms that kickstart diversification efforts.

Supplemental Material: The online supplement is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2020.14705.

群体规模及其对同质群体中与多样性相关的认知和聘用决策的影响
为什么一些同质群体会因为缺乏多样性而遭到反弹,而另一些群体却能逃脱责难?我们的研究表明,一个同质群体的规模会改变人们对它的看法,也会改变决策者是否在群体中追求更大的多样性。我们的理论是,由于贝叶斯推理,人们对较大群体的推断与对较小群体的推断不同,从而对多样性管理产生影响。这可能会导致人们对大型群体缺乏多样性产生敏感性,而对小型群体缺乏多样性产生有限的敏感性。由于每个小组成员都代表了招聘决策的结果,因此较大的同质小组比较小的同质小组更容易出现多样性问题。在三个预先登记的实验中(n = 4283),我们发现决策者更倾向于将较大的同质群体多样化,而不是将较小的同质群体多样化,并认为较大的同质群体(i)更有可能是不公平选拔过程的结果;(ii)多样化程度较低;(iii)更有可能面临与多样化相关的印象管理问题;以及(iv)对新加入的代表性不足成员的影响开放性较低。此外,(i)-(iii) 在同质群体规模与多元化决策之间起到了中介作用。我们将研究结果扩展到 S&P 1500 公司董事会,结果表明,规模较大的同质董事会更有可能增加女性或少数民族董事。规模较大的同质董事会也比预期的要少,而规模较小的同质董事会却出人意料地多。这表明,决策者忽视了较小群体的同质性,而对较大同质性群体的多元化投入了额外的精力。我们的发现凸显了群体规模如何影响与多元化相关的认知和决策,并确定了启动多元化努力的机制:在线补充材料可在 https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2020.14705 上获取。
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来源期刊
Organization Science
Organization Science MANAGEMENT-
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
4.90%
发文量
166
期刊介绍: Organization Science is ranked among the top journals in management by the Social Science Citation Index in terms of impact and is widely recognized in the fields of strategy, management, and organization theory. Organization Science provides one umbrella for the publication of research from all over the world in fields such as organization theory, strategic management, sociology, economics, political science, history, information science, communication theory, and psychology.
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