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2012-02-11
Would the world be more peaceful if women were in charge? A challenging new book by the Harvard University psychologist Steven Pinker says that the answer is “yes.”
In The Better Angels of Our Nature, Pinker presents data showing that human violence, while still very much with us today, has been gradually declining. Moreover, he says, “over the long sweep of history, women have been and will be a pacifying force. Traditional war is a man’s game: tribal women never band together to raid neighboring villages.” As mothers, women have evolutionary incentives to maintain peaceful conditions in which to nurture their offspring and ensure that their genes survive into the next generation.
Skeptics immediately reply that women have not made war simply because they have rarely been in power. If they were empowered as leaders, the conditions of an anarchic world would force them to make the same bellicose decisions that men do. Margaret Thatcher, Golda Meir, and Indira Gandhi were powerful women; all of them led their countries to war.
But it is also true that these women rose to leadership by playing according to the political rules of “a man’s world.” It was their success in conforming to male values that enabled their rise to leadership in the first place. In a world in which women held a proportionate share (one-half) of leadership positions, they might behave differently in power.
So we are left with the broader question: does gender really matter in leadership? In terms of stereotypes, various psychological studies show that men gravitate to the hard power of command, while women are collaborative and intuitively understand the soft power of attraction and persuasion. Americans tend to describe leadership with tough male stereotypes, but recent leadership studies show increased success for what was once considered a “feminine style.”
In information-based societies, networks are replacing hierarchies, and knowledge workers are less deferential. Management in a wide range of organizations is changing in the direction of “shared leadership,” and “distributed leadership,” with leaders in the center of a circle rather than atop a pyramid. Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt said that he had to “coddle” his employees.
Even the military faces these changes. In the United States, the Pentagon says that Army drillmasters do “less shouting at everyone,” because today’s generation responds better to instructors who play “a more counseling-type role.” Military success against terrorists and counterinsurgents requires soldiers to win hearts and minds, not just break buildings and bodies.
Former US President George W. Bush once described his role as “the decider,” but there is much more to modern leadership than that. Modern leaders must be able to use networks, to collaborate, and to encourage participation. Women’s non-hierarchical style and relational skills fit a leadership need in the new world of knowledge-based organizations and groups that men, on average, are less well prepared to meet.
In the past, when women fought their way to the top of organizations, they often had to adopt a “masculine style,” violating the broader social norm of female “niceness.” Now, however, with the information revolution and democratization demanding more participatory leadership, the “feminine style” is becoming a path to more effective leadership. In order to lead successfully, men will not only have to value this style in their women colleagues, but will also have to master the same skills.
That is a trend, not (yet) a fact. Women still lag in leadership positions, holding only 5% of top corporate positions and a minority of positions in elected legislatures (just 16% in the US, for example, compared to 45% in Sweden). One study of the 1,941 rulers of independent countries during the twentieth century found only 27 women, roughly half of whom came to power as widows or daughters of a male ruler. Less than 1% of twentieth-century rulers were women who gained power on their own.
So, given the new conventional wisdom in leadership studies that entering the information age means entering a woman’s world, why are women not doing better?
Lack of experience, primary caregiver responsibilities, bargaining style, and plain old discrimination all help to explain the gender gap. Traditional career paths, and the cultural norms that constructed and reinforced them, simply have not enabled women to gain the skills required for top leadership positions in many organizational contexts.
Research shows that even in democratic societies, women face a higher social risk than men when attempting to negotiate for career-related resources such as compensation. Women are generally not well integrated into male networks that dominate organizations, and gender stereotypes still hamper women who try to overcome such barriers.
This bias is beginning to break down in information-based societies, but it is a mistake to identify the new type of leadership we need in an information age simply as “a woman’s world.” Even positive stereotypes are bad for women, men, and effective leadership.
Leaders should be viewed less in terms of heroic command than as encouraging participation throughout an organization, group, country, or network. Questions of appropriate style – when to use hard and soft skills – are equally relevant for men and women, and should not be clouded by traditional gender stereotypes. In some circumstances, men will need to act more “like women”; in others, women will need to be more “like men.”
The key choices about war and peace in our future will depend not on gender, but on how leaders combine hard- and soft-power skills to produce smart strategies. Both men and women will make those decisions. But Pinker is probably correct when he notes that the parts of the world that lag in the decline of violence are also the parts that lag in the empowerment of women

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2012-2-11 21:05:48
呵呵,你这个问题哈,我想这么回答你——我知道你们认为我有“女性化”的东西——

咱们就拿你们所谓的爱国来说吧!!!你们所谓的爱国,就是今天打这个,明天打那个!!!是吧,你们认为主张武力解决问题的人——才算是男人,才算是爱国,是吧???!!!

那么,我可以给你举个很明确的比喻——咱们假设一个国家的发展,可以分为三个阶段——普通的石头、水晶石、宝石。中国现在的阶段,有很好的地方,但是也有很多自己的事情需要解决,所以,可以视为处于水晶石阶段,也就是说——要比旧社会时期的普通石头要强,但是还没有进化到宝石阶段。所以呢,如果你真正爱国的话,最爱国的方式——是想尽种种办法、使中国发展到宝石阶段,所以,真正的爱国——是很珍惜中国的。

你们的方式——其实就是将中国这个水晶石当做普通的石头一样,今天敲打这个、明天敲打那个,非要将中国从水晶阶段退回到破石头阶段,是吧???!!!——这是爱国吗???!!!

你可以去看下美国的对外方式,你就会发现很多东西——

首先,100多年以来,美国的历次战争,都不是在自己的本土上进行的。包括一战、二战以及之后的历次战争,所以美国本土的生产、生活是不受战争破坏的,可以照常进行。——你觉得,中国目前的战争,可以不在中国的本土进行吗???!!!

第二,美国的历次战争,基本上都是占据着相当大的优势的,而且几乎都是和很多盟友对付一个。按照你们的想法,中国应该今天打这个、明天打那个,好像是中国应该对付很多人似的。你这是爱国呢,还是害国呢???!!!

所以,盲目的武力——其实是匹夫之勇。只有中国的领土完整和主权受到威胁,只有涉及到中国的核心利益受到威胁的时候,中国的武力自卫、武力反击——才是应该的。如果中国的领土完整和主权没有受到威胁,如果中国的核心利益没有受到威胁,最好的方式还是想尽一切方式保证自己进化到宝石阶段——这才是上策,其他的东西——可以通过联合国、双边或多方谈判解决比较好!!!
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