Skip to main content
IACM 2023

Full Program »

Advantaged Groups Misperceive How Allyship Will Be Received

Allyship is a way for advantaged groups to advance equity, yet acts of allyship are infrequent or limited. Here we explore a potential reason for this: a miscalibration between advantaged and disadvantaged groups’ perceptions of allyship. Studies 1a-2b demonstrate that advantaged groups (men in Studies 1a-1b; White people in Studies 2a-2b) underestimate how much disadvantaged groups (women in Studies 1a-1b; Black people in Studies 2a-2b) would appreciate various acts of allyship. Studies 3 and 4 examine real, behavioral contexts whereby advantaged groups underestimate disadvantaged groups’ appreciation of allyship. Study 5 demonstrates that expectations about appreciation predict allyship intentions. Study 6 reveals people do not anticipate our primary pattern of findings (instead, assuming advantaged groups overestimate appreciation) and Study 7 explores whether disadvantaged groups appreciate allyship differently depending on it is performed by an advantaged group member or fellow disadvantaged group member.

Hannah Birnbaum
Washington University in St. Louis
United States

Desman Wilson
Northwestern University
United States

Adam Waytz
Northwestern University
United States

 


Powered by OpenConf®
Copyright ©2002-2022 Zakon Group LLC