Open Research will be unavailable from 3am to 7am on Thursday 4th December 2025 AEDT due to scheduled maintenance.
 

A special gift we bestow on you for being representative of us: Considering leader charisma from a self-categorization perspective

Date

Authors

Platow, Michael
van Knippenberg, Daan
Haslam, S. Alexander
van Knippenberg, Barbara
Spears, Russell

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

The British Psychological Society

Abstract

Two experiments tested hypotheses, derived from social identity and self-categorization theories, regarding the attribution of charisma to leaders. In Experiment I (N = 203), in-group prototypical leaders were attributed greater levels of charisma and were perceived to be more persuasive than in-group non-prototypical leaders. In Experiment 2 (N = 220), leaders described with in-group stereotypical characteristics were attributed relatively high levels of charisma regardless of their group-oriented versus exchange rhetoric. Leaders described with out-group stereotypical characteristics, however, had to employ group-oriented rhetoric to be attributed relatively high levels of charisma. We conclude that leadership emerges from being representative of 'us'; charisma may, indeed, be a special gift, but it is one bestowed on group members by group members for being representative of, rather than distinct from, the group itself.

Description

Citation

Source

British Journal of Social Psychology

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31