Speaking up on social injustices may help create more just and inclusive organizations. Yet, many people choose to remain silent. In this article, we test how managerial silence on injustices can shape impressions of a manager's lack of support for an outgroup. In Study 1, we surveyed employees and found that many noticed their managers' silence and recounted that such silence influenced how they perceived their managers. We then conducted nine experimental studies (Studies 2-6, Supplemental Studies 1-4) to test how observers' perceptions of managers who engage in silence on an outgroup injustice depend on whether managers have spoken up or remained silent in the past. We demonstrate that when a manager engages in selective silence by previously speaking up on an injustice but remains silent on an outgroup injustice, observers perceive the manager as harboring greater bias and as supportive of the outgroup than if they remained totally silent on both issues. In contrast, when a manager engages in selective silence by previously speaking up on an injustice but then remains silent on a second outgroup injustice, observers perceive the manager as generally supportive of social justice and as supportive of the second outgroup than if they remained totally silent on both issues. We discuss implications for speaking up and remaining silent on injustices in the workplace. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/apl0001240 | DOI Listing |
J Appl Psychol
September 2024
Department of Management and Organizations, Anderson School of Management, University of California, Los Angeles.
Speaking up on social injustices may help create more just and inclusive organizations. Yet, many people choose to remain silent. In this article, we test how managerial silence on injustices can shape impressions of a manager's lack of support for an outgroup.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPers Soc Psychol Rev
May 2024
Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Academic Abstract: In this narrative review, we examined 134 studies of the relationship between intergroup contact and collective action benefiting disadvantaged groups. We aimed to identify whether, when, and why contact has mobilizing effects (promoting collective action) or sedative effects (inhibiting collective action). For both moderators and mediators, factors associated with the intergroup situation (compared with those associated with the out-group or the in-group) emerged as the most important.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Community Appl Soc Psychol
July 2022
Early and middle adolescents' judgments and reasonings about peers who challenge exclusive and inclusive peer group norms were examined across three studies with varying intergroup contexts. Study 1 participants included ( = 199) non-Arab American participants responding to an Arab American/non-Arab American intergroup context. Study 2 included ( = 123) non-Asian and ( = 105) Asian American participants responding to an Asian/non-Asian American intergroup context.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChildren (Basel)
December 2022
Service de Psychiatrie de l'Enfant et de l'Adolescent, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Hôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière, 75006 Paris, France.
Background: The sympathy-empathy (SE) system is commonly considered a key faculty implied in prosocial behaviors, and SE deficits (also called callous-unemotional traits, CUTs) are associated with nonprosocial and even violent behaviors. Thus, the first intuitive considerations considered a lack of SE among young people who undergo radicalization. Yet, their identification with a cause, their underlying feelings of injustice and grievance, and the other ways in which they may help communities, suggest that they may actually have a lot of empathy, even an excess of it.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolit Res Q
September 2022
University of California, Los Angeles, USA.
Prior research suggests social ties with undocumented immigrants among Latinxs may increase political engagement despite constraints undocumented social networks may introduce. We build on prior research and find across six surveys of Latinxs that social ties with undocumented immigrants are reliably associated with collective, identity expressive activities such as protesting, but not activities where immigration may not be immediately relevant, such as voting. Moreover, we assess a series of mechanisms to resolve the puzzle of heightened participation despite constraints.
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