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Care to trust? Gender and trust in leaders during the Coronavirus pandemic

Care to trust? Gender and trust in leaders during the Coronavirus pandemic
Care to trust? Gender and trust in leaders during the Coronavirus pandemic

There has been praise of how female leaders have handled the Coronavirus pandemic relative to their male counterparts by presenting a more “caring” leadership. Of similar coverage has been the role of public trust for how successful governments have been in containing outbreaks. In this paper, we build on these two literatures to understand different determinants of trust during the pandemic between men and women. Following social role theory, we argue that female citizens’ trust judgements are more likely to be driven by the perception that leaders are more caring than are men, whilst men's judgements are more likely to be driven by competence judgements than women's. We test this argument using original survey data from three countries. We find that this relationship holds in the United States, but not the United Kingdom or Italy. This adds to variation in gender gaps in the USA and Europe; at the same time, it also suggests that the propensity for women to be less trusting than men is not down to (perceived) leadership traits.

1745-7289
232-244
Willis, Hannah
4a1357f7-bdc1-41cd-8992-dab4e10c38bf
Smith, Jessica C.
96f97364-8922-4e62-8581-0d2983052e20
Devine, Daniel
82181904-c8a3-4df7-9066-4cc6b9df9f6b
Willis, Hannah
4a1357f7-bdc1-41cd-8992-dab4e10c38bf
Smith, Jessica C.
96f97364-8922-4e62-8581-0d2983052e20
Devine, Daniel
82181904-c8a3-4df7-9066-4cc6b9df9f6b

Willis, Hannah, Smith, Jessica C. and Devine, Daniel (2021) Care to trust? Gender and trust in leaders during the Coronavirus pandemic. Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties, 31 (S1), 232-244. (doi:10.1080/17457289.2021.1924737).

Record type: Article

Abstract

There has been praise of how female leaders have handled the Coronavirus pandemic relative to their male counterparts by presenting a more “caring” leadership. Of similar coverage has been the role of public trust for how successful governments have been in containing outbreaks. In this paper, we build on these two literatures to understand different determinants of trust during the pandemic between men and women. Following social role theory, we argue that female citizens’ trust judgements are more likely to be driven by the perception that leaders are more caring than are men, whilst men's judgements are more likely to be driven by competence judgements than women's. We test this argument using original survey data from three countries. We find that this relationship holds in the United States, but not the United Kingdom or Italy. This adds to variation in gender gaps in the USA and Europe; at the same time, it also suggests that the propensity for women to be less trusting than men is not down to (perceived) leadership traits.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 15 June 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 June 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 455167
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/455167
ISSN: 1745-7289
PURE UUID: b49040b5-f1cc-4ef3-a1d6-26a1eeee0362
ORCID for Jessica C. Smith: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4909-8884

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Date deposited: 10 Mar 2022 20:18
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:56

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Contributors

Author: Hannah Willis
Author: Daniel Devine

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