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Female
bosses can wreck other women's promotion
Tuesday April 12, 2011 11:42:38 AM,
IANS
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London: Women who
make it to the top of an organisation are more likely to help out
their male subordinates than female ones and sometimes can even
wreck another woman's promotion prospects, says a study. Called the
"Queen Bee syndrome", the phenomenon can be a major obstacle to
women climbing the managerial ladder, says the Daily Mail in a
despatch.
Psychologists at the University of Cincinnati have found that
instead of encouraging other ambitious women, female bosses were
more inclined to obstruct them.
Men who report to a woman manager get much more mentoring and
support than their female colleagues.
The findings have been published in the journal Social Science
Research.
Researchers say this may partly be due to the fact that women who
occupy senior posts want to blend in with their male counterparts.
The study, based on responses from over 2,000 employees in the US,
backs up earlier research on the "Queen Bee syndrome".
In 2008, German researchers reported that women who answered to a
female supervisor suffered more depression, insomnia, headaches
and heartburn than if their boss was a man.
And a British survey said two-thirds of women preferred a male
boss as they are straight-talking, less likely to talk about staff
behind their backs and not prone to mood swings.
Cary Cooper, an expert in workplace psychology at Lancaster
University, said the findings may be due to women
over-compensating as they do not want to be accused of favouring
female staff.
"This is classic Queen Bee syndrome. Women who get into managerial
jobs in male-dominated organisations tend to be very much like the
men, if not harder," he said.
"Take Lady Thatcher, she was considered to be tougher than lots of
the men around her and that's exactly why she got to the top."
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