Abstract
Social movements seek allies as they campaign for social, political, and organizational changes. How do activists gain allies in the targeted institutions they hope to change? Despite recognition of the importance of ally support in theories about institutional change and social movements, these theories are largely silent on the microdynamics of ally mobilization. We examine how the labeling of organizational policies that benefit women influences potential workplace allies’ support for these policies. We theorize that one barrier to mobilizing workplace allies is a misalignment of the labels that activists use to promote new policies and employees’ affiliation with collective identities. We conducted five experiments to test our hypotheses and 26 qualitative interviews to provide illustration of our core concepts. We demonstrate that employees high in feminist identification are more likely to support feminist-labeled (feminist and #MeToo) than unlabeled policies, whereas those low in feminist identification are less likely to support feminist-labeled than unlabeled policies (Studies 1–3). However, we find that participants for whom organizational identification was high (whether measured or manipulated) and feminist identification was low supported organizationally labeled policies more than feminist-labeled polices (Studies 4 and 5). This illustrates that policies whose aims may not align with one collective identity can still garner support by activating another relevant collective identity. Within our studies, we provide evidence that these effects are mediated via feelings of pride in the organization (and not fear or anger), suggesting that positive emotions are a central mechanism in mobilizing workplace allies.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 2508-2525 |
Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | Organization Science |
Volume | 34 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Nov 2023 |
Funding
The authors thank the seminar participants at the University of Chicago Private Politics Conference, University of Connecticut, University of Arizona, University of Minnesota, and USI Lugano for their insightful comments. The authors thank Alexis Smith Washington for lending her insight in to the development of interview protocols. The authors also acknowledge the contributions of the Kellogg Behavioral Lab, directed by Ginger Jacobson. In particular, the authors thank Grace DeAngelis, Julia Cowan, Samantha Smith, and Tong Su, who assisted with the interviews and references.
Keywords
- #MeToo
- collective identities
- experimental designs
- feminist
- institutional theory
- labels
- laboratory research
- organization and management theory
- power and politics
- pride
- research design and methods
- social movements
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Strategy and Management
- Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management
- Management of Technology and Innovation