An Experimental Examination of Demand-Side Preferences for Female and Male National Leaders

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Abstract

Females constitute a far smaller proportion of political leaders than their proportion in the general population. Leading demand- and supply side explanations for this phenomenon account for some of the variance but leave a great deal unexplained. In an effort to account for additional variance, this research evaluates the issue informed by the biological theory of evolution by natural selection, a foundational explanation for the diversity and function of living organisms. It experimentally assesses how varying types of inter- and intragroup threat–a recurring ancestral problem–affect demand for female and male national leaders. This work analyzes data collected from individuals (N = 826) in the U.S. during the 2012 Cooperative Congressional Election Study. The results suggest the predominant preference for male over female leaders in some contexts may be the non-adaptive and non-functional but lingering outcome of an adaptive preference for physically formidable allies that was shaped by natural selection in ancestral environments.

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Murray, G. R., & Carroll, B. A. (2020). An Experimental Examination of Demand-Side Preferences for Female and Male National Leaders. Frontiers in Psychology, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.576278

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