马来西亚和澳大利亚的男性和女性中层管理人员:职场态度、晋升愿望和自评领导风格的跨文化比较

Glenice J. Wood, Uma Jogulu
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引用次数: 20

摘要

本文概述了女性在全球管理中的崛起,并考虑了为什么很少有女性获得高级或行政管理职位。考虑到当今组织的变化被认为需要更多的“女性领导”,女性进入高级职位的缓慢进展令人意外。据报道,对管理人员男性特征的强调有所减少,并且要求组织需要采用更多的“女性领导”,以确保他们在未来的生存(Powell, Butterfield & Parent, 2002, p.189)。最近的实证研究报告指出,男性和女性管理者在领导风格上存在差异,研究结果表明,女性比男性管理者表现出更多的变革型领导,这种风格被强烈地等同于有效的领导(Eagly, Johannesen-Schmidt, van Engen, 2003)。然而,这些发现是基于西方的研究,跨文化研究可能会产生不同的结果(House, Hanges, Javidan, Dorfman, & Gupta, 2004)。在一个更为家长式的社会中,领导和领导风格的概念可能会有所不同。为了探索这种可能性,在马来西亚和澳大利亚进行了一项跨文化研究。假设在文化价值观上家长式的国家会对女性在管理角色上表现出更强的约束,这可能会影响到工作场所的态度、晋升的愿望和所展示的领导风格。因此,马来西亚女性管理人员的职业发展可能比澳大利亚女性管理人员的问题更大。本文概述了马来西亚和澳大利亚初步试点研究的结果,并强调了与西方文献报道的一些有趣的相似之处和差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Malaysian and Australian male and female middle managers : a cross-cultural comparison of workplace attitudes, aspirations for promotion, and self-rated leadership styles
This paper outlines the rise of women in management worldwide, and considers why so few women achieve senior or executive management positions. This slow advance of women into senior roles is unexpected given that the changes in organisations today are believed to require more ‘feminine leadership’. A decrease in the emphasis on masculine characteristics for managers is reported, and a requirement that more ‘feminine leadership’ needs to be adopted by organisations in order to ensure their survival in the future (Powell, Butterfield & Parent, 2002, p.189). Recent empirical research reports that there are differences in leadership style between male and female managers, and the findings suggest that women exhibit more transformational leadership than their male counterparts, with this style being strongly equated with effective leadership (Eagly, Johannesen-Schmidt, van Engen, 2003). However, these findings are based on western research, and it may be that cross cultural research will yield a different picture (House, Hanges, Javidan, Dorfman, & Gupta, 2004). Leadership and leadership styles may be conceptualised differently in a more paternalistic society. To explore this possibility, a cross cultural study was conducted in Malaysia and Australia. It is hypothesised that countries that are paternalistic in cultural values will exhibit a stronger constraint on women in management roles, which may impact on workplace attitudes, aspirations for promotion and style of leadership exhibited. Therefore, it is possible that the career advancement of women may be more problematic for Malaysian managerial women than their Australian counterparts. Results from an initial pilot study in Malaysia and Australia are outlined, and highlight some interesting similarities and differences to what are reported in the western literature.
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