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Country-level and individual-level predictors of men\u27s support for gender equality in 42 countries
Authors
Collins Badu Agyemang
Gülçin Akbaş
+28 more
Soline Ammirati
Joel Anderson
Gulnaz Anjum
John Jamir Benzon R. Aruta
Mujeeba Ashraf
Aistė Bakaitytė
Maja Becker
Michael Bender
Deborah L. Best
Tomasz Besta
Chongzeng Bi
Janine Bosak
Jennifer K. Bosson
Dashamir Bërxulli
Serena Daalmans
Justine Dandy
Soledad de Lemus
Nikolay Dvorianchikov
Edgardo Etchezahar
Laura Froehlich
Paweł Jurek
Natasza Kosakowska-Berezecka
Saba Safdar
Jurand Sobiecki
Joesph A. Vandello
Anna Wlodarczyk
Magdalena Zawisza
Magdalena Żadkowska
Publication date
1 January 2020
Publisher
Animo Repository
Abstract
Men sometimes withdraw support for gender equality movements when their higher gender status is threatened. Here, we expand the focus of this phenomenon by examining it cross-culturally, to test if both individual- and country-level variables predict men\u27s collective action intentions to support gender equality. We tested a model in which men\u27s zero-sum beliefs about gender predict reduced collective action intentions via an increase in hostile sexism. Because country-level gender equality may threaten men\u27s higher gender status, we also examined whether the path from zero-sum beliefs to collective action intentions was stronger in countries higher in gender equality. Multilevel modeling on 6,734 men from 42 countries supported the individual-level mediation model, but found no evidence of moderation by country-level gender equality. Both country-level gender equality and individual-level zero-sum thinking independently predicted reductions in men\u27s willingness to act collectively for gender equality. © 2020 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
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Last time updated on 03/12/2021