Masculine defaults: Identifying and mitigating hidden cultural biases.

S Cheryan, HR Markus - Psychological Review, 2020 - psycnet.apa.org
Psychological Review, 2020psycnet.apa.org
Understanding and remedying women's underrepresentation in majority-male fields and
occupations require the recognition of a lesser-known form of cultural bias called masculine
defaults. Masculine defaults exist when aspects of a culture value, reward, or regard as
standard, normal, neutral, or necessary characteristics or behaviors associated with the
male gender role. Although feminist theorists have previously described and analyzed
masculine defaults (eg, Bem, 1984; de Beauvoir, 1953; Gilligan, 1982; Warren, 1977), here …
Abstract
Understanding and remedying women’s underrepresentation in majority-male fields and occupations require the recognition of a lesser-known form of cultural bias called masculine defaults. Masculine defaults exist when aspects of a culture value, reward, or regard as standard, normal, neutral, or necessary characteristics or behaviors associated with the male gender role. Although feminist theorists have previously described and analyzed masculine defaults (eg, Bem, 1984; de Beauvoir, 1953; Gilligan, 1982; Warren, 1977), here we define masculine defaults in more detail, distinguish them from more well-researched forms of bias, and describe how they contribute to women’s underrepresentation. We additionally discuss how to counteract masculine defaults and possible challenges to addressing them. Efforts to increase women’s participation in majority-male departments and companies would benefit from identifying and counteracting masculine defaults on multiple levels of organizational culture (ie, ideas, institutional policies, interactions, individuals).(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved)
American Psychological Association
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