Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science / Revue canadienne des sciences du comportement, Vol 57(1), Jan 2025, 23-33; doi:10.1037/cbs0000390
Gender inequality persists in the workplace and especially in male-dominated organizations like the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF). One cultural response to gender inequality is empowerment messaging, which entails an optimistic and individualistic focus on women’s agency and ability to succeed in life. Although empowerment messaging may seem beneficial on the surface, it has the unintended negative consequence of increasing attributions for women’s responsibility for gender inequality. We proposed that this unintended negative consequence generalizes to empowerment messaging concerning women’s role in the CAF. In two experiments (total N = 812), one of which was preregistered, results demonstrated that exposure to empowerment messaging in an informational video produced by the CAF directly increased the burden placed on women to solve gender inequality in the CAF and indirectly predicted more blame placed on women for causing gender inequality in the CAF. This research suggests that the CAF should avoid empowerment messaging in its public communications to avoid potential harm to women, especially now when the organization is grappling with the systemic problem of gender inequality. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved)