Gender Quotas, Competitions, and Peer Review: Experimental Evidence on the Backlash Against Women

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Leibbrandt, Andreas
Wang, Liang Choon
Foo, Cordelia
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2018
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Abstract

This study experimentally investigates gender quotas in light of peer review. We investigate competitions with and without gender quotas and a peer review process that allows for sabotage. Our findings show that the possibility of peer sabotage renders the gender quota ineffective in encouraging women to enter tournaments and reversing gender pay gaps. Moreover, we provide evidence of a severe backlash against women, as they become targets of sabotage under gender quotas. Interestingly, this is the result of women focusing on sabotaging each other while men sabotage indiscriminately. Our results have implications for the use of quotas to mitigate the under-representation and underperformance of minority groups in environments in which peer sabotage is possible.

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MANAGEMENT SCIENCE

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64

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8

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© 2018 INFORMS. This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal website for access to the definitive, published version.

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Information and computing sciences

Commerce, management, tourism and services

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