Abstract
Past work has shown that personal experiences of gender discrimination are associated with a tendency among women to distance themselves from the gender ingroup. We propose that merely encountering workplace cultures with strong norms aligned with masculinity (i.e., a "masculinity contest culture," or MCC) can produce a self-group distancing response. In four studies (total n = 3955) we demonstrate that MCCs devalue the female social identity, which undermines women's personal sense of status, leading them to self-group distance in these workplaces. In Study 1, women (not men) were more likely to conceal their gender in a workplace with strong (vs. weak) MCC and reported stronger self-group distancing. In Study 2, which included employees across industries that varied in MCCs, we found that MCC correlated with self-group distancing for women (not men), and lower personal status mediated this relationship. We further tested the causal chain in two experiments. In Study 3, participants perceived the female (vs. male) social identity as lower status in workplaces with strong (vs. weak/control) MCC, and ingroup status perceptions mediated the negative effect of MCC on personal status for women more strongly than men. In Study 4, experimentally elevating the status of the female social identity reduced the gender gap in self-group distancing via an increase in women's personal status. These findings illuminate how women's personal status in MCCs is strongly rooted in their gender ingroup status, and is a key mechanism whereby this subtle form of workplace bias triggers self-group distancing in women.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 104832 |
| Number of pages | 15 |
| Journal | Journal of Experimental Social Psychology |
| Volume | 122 |
| Early online date | Sept 2025 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jan 2026 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2024
Funding
Vial gratefully acknowledges financial support from the Center of Behavioral Institutional Design and Tamkeen under the NYU Abu Dhabi Research Institute Award CG005. The authors would like to thank the members of the Social Roles & Beliefs Lab at New York University Abu Dhabi, Madeline Heilman's Lab at New York University, and Belle Derks for their input, and Cece Kim, Vid Milaković, Acklinda Liu, Yves Teng, Mostafa Elsaid, Jasmine Arriaga, Crystal Jemy, Morui Yu for their research assistance.
| Funders |
|---|
| New York University Abu Dhabi |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 5 Gender Equality
Keywords
- Ingroup distancing
- Masculine workplace norms
- Masculinity contest culture
- Self-group distancing
- Status
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Masculinity contest cultures lead to self-group distancing in women'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Research output
- 1 Web publication/site
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When Work Becomes a Masculinity Contest, Women Step Back from Their Gender Identity: When workplace cultures reward masculinity, women often downplay their gender just to be respected.
Veldman, J. & Vial, A. C., 5 Nov 2025Research output: Non-textual form › Web publication/site › Popular
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