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Charismatic Leadership and Cooperation in Social Dilemmas: A Matter of Transforming Motives?

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Charismatic Leadership and Cooperation in Social Dilemmas: A Matter of Transforming Motives?
Author(s)De Cremer, David
AbstractThe present experiment examined whether leaders high in charisma are able to motivate decision-makers to cooperate more in a public goods dilemma. On the basis of charismatic leadership theories, it was expected that a charismatic leader would be able to transform people’s motives beyond self-interest, consequently increasing cooperation. This transformation effect was expected to occur among individuals aimed at maximizing their own self-interest (i.e., pro-selfs), but not among those aimed at maximizing joint or collective outcomes (i.e., pro-socials). Furthermore, leader’s charisma was experimentally manipulated by means of describing the leader as either self-sacrificing or benefiting. The results revealed that self-sacrificing leaders, contrary to benefiting leaders, were perceived as more charismatic and were able to motivate decision-makers to cooperate more. The latter effect appeared to be more pronounced among pro-selfs rather than pro-socials, as such supporting the transformational idea of charismatic leaders. Further results showed that this behavioral effect was mediated by perceptions of legitimacy. The meaning and conception of charismatic leadership in decision-making situations are discussed by using insights from the social dilemma and charismatic leadership literature.
IssueNo5
Pages997-1016
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceJournal of Applied Social Psychology
VolumeNo32
PubDateMay 2002
ISBN_ISSN0021-9029

Group Dynamics

  • Bandwagon Effects, NIMBY, and Collective Delusions
  • Caste, Class, Status, and Hierarchy
  • Charity, Volunteerism, and Prosocial Behavior
  • DeIndividuation and Dehumunization
  • Group Communication
  • In-Group/ Out-Group Dynamics
  • Inter- and Intra-Group Dynamics
  • Interpersonal and Familial Relations
  • Norms, Shared Values, and Beliefs
  • Peer Groups, Reference Groups and Group Identity
  • Power, Authority, and Domination
  • Race, Religion, and Ethnicity
  • Social Dilemmas, Prisoner’s Dilemma, and Tragedy of the Commons


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