American Psychologist
Vol. 65, Issue 3, Pages 194-200
April 2010
Abstract
The model presented argues that leadership involves bringing
together not only diverse individuals but also the subgroups to which
they belong. The model further argues that this does not require
replacing people's subgroup identities with a superordinate group
identity (turning "us" and "them" into "we"); bringing together diverse
individuals and their subgroups can be accomplished by promoting
positive relations among subgroups, even as their distinctive
identities (their senses of "us" and "them") remain. The model
conceptualizes positive and negative intergroup attitudes as two
independent dimensions of intergroup relations, each with distinct
antecedents and distinct associated outcomes. Leaders seeking to create
a collective from diverse subgroups must therefore (a) reduce negative
intergroup attitudes and (b) increase positive intergroup attitudes.
The author applies the model to organizational contexts of national
diversity, but it can be applied to leadership across other forms of
diversity.
Citation
Pittinsky, Todd L. "A Two-Dimensional Model of Intergroup Leadership." American Psychologist 65.3 (April 2010): 194-200.