Does Integration Change Gender Attitudes? The Effect of Randomly Assigning Women to Traditionally Male Teams

Authored by academic.oup.com and submitted by smurfyjenkins

We examine whether exposure of men to women in a traditionally male-dominated environment can change attitudes about mixed-gender productivity, gender roles, and gender identity. Our context is the military in Norway, where we randomly assigned female recruits to some squads but not others during boot camp. We find that living and working with women for eight weeks causes men to have more egalitarian attitudes. There is a 14 percentage point higher fraction of men who think mixed-gender teams perform as well or better than same-gender teams, an 8 percentage point increase in men who think household work should be shared equally and a 14 percentage point increase in men who do not completely disavow feminine traits. Moreover, men exposed to mixed-gender teams are more likely to choose military occupations immediately after boot camp which have a higher fraction of females in them. But these effects do not persist once treatment stops. Treated men’s attitudes converge to those of the controls in a six-month follow-up survey and there is no long-term effect on choosing fields of study, occupations, or workplaces with a higher fraction of women in them after military service ends. Contrary to the predictions of many policymakers, we do not find that integrating women into squads hurt male recruits’ performance or satisfaction with service, either during boot camp or their subsequent military assignment. These findings provide evidence that even in a highly gender-skewed environment, gender stereotypes are malleable and can be altered by integrating members of the opposite sex. But they also suggest that without continuing intensive exposure, effects are unlikely to persist.

Illigard on December 31st, 2020 at 07:57 UTC »

Important to note, these egalitarian attitudes had reverted to those of the control group after 6 months, meaning the effect did not last. And this was in bootcamp, a controlled safe environment and therefore does not necessarily translate to the battlefield, rescue efforts and other places they may be deployed.

BuddhaPunch1 on December 31st, 2020 at 04:11 UTC »

The marines did a study on integrated combat units a few years ago and absolutely found that the unit performance was lower than all male. Attitudes and individual performance aren't what matters, mission accomplishment and member survival is.

Edit: Here's a link, for the interested

Edit again: Another article with more actual findings summary than the NPR one. First link still has the full report in it directly.

BioDidact on December 31st, 2020 at 03:16 UTC »

Just as a question related to the non-reduction of make recruits' performance, did it increase female recruits' performance at all?