Banding together to avoid exploitation: Dominant (but not prestige-based) leaders motivate collective moral opposition from followers

Author:

Ronay Richard1ORCID,Oostrom Janneke K2,She Minnie1,Maner Jon3

Affiliation:

1. University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands

3. Florida State University, USA

Abstract

Although dominance is a common strategy for attaining high social rank, it often entails exploitative behavior, bringing leaders into conflict with followers. Anthropological work suggests that a long evolutionary history of such conflict has set the stage for moral systems designed to reduce exploitation from powerful people. Here we establish links between dominance (and prestige) and moral leadership, reporting three studies (total N = 1246) demonstrating that, in response to dominant leaders, followers band together in collective opposition aimed at resisting, and even toppling, incumbent leaders. These studies also identify specific social psychological pathways through which dominant leaders elicit moral opposition—low levels of trust and gossip both mediated effects of leader dominance on collective opposition by followers. While dominance may allow people to rise through the ranks of a social hierarchy, the long-term durability of dominance as a leadership strategy may be undermined by collective moral opposition from followers.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Communication,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology

Reference69 articles.

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3. Impact of the Human Egalitarian Syndrome on Darwinian Selection Mechanics

4. Ancestral Hierarchy and Conflict

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