Children Hold Leaders Primarily Responsible, Not Entitled

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Abstract

Do children construe leaders as individuals whose position of power entails primarily more responsibility or more entitlement, compared with nonleaders? To address this question, 5-year-old children (n = 128) heard a story involving a hierarchical dyad (a leader and a nonleader) and an egalitarian dyad (two nonleaders), and then assessed protagonists’ relative contributions to a collaborative endeavor (Experiments 1 and 2) or relative withdrawals from a common resource pool earned jointly (Experiment 3). Children expected a leader to contribute more toward a joint goal than its nonleader partner, and to withdraw an equal share (not more) from a common pool. Children thus gave evidence that they construed leaders as more responsible, rather than more entitled, relative to nonleaders.

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Stavans, M., & Diesendruck, G. (2021). Children Hold Leaders Primarily Responsible, Not Entitled. Child Development, 92(1), 308–323. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13420

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