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How gender moderates the mediating mechanism across social experience, self-referent beliefs and social entrepreneurship intentions

Eun-Jeong Ko (Department of Management and Entrepreneurship, Silberman College of Business, Fairleigh Dickinson University, Madison, New Jersey, USA)
Jiyun Kang (Division of Consumer Science/White Lodging-J.W. Marriott, Jr School of Hospitality and Tourism Management, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA)

Gender in Management

ISSN: 1754-2413

Article publication date: 8 July 2022

Issue publication date: 4 October 2022

355

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to understand how social experience influences social entrepreneurial (SE) intentions through different types of self-referent beliefs and how gender affects this mechanism.

Design/methodology/approach

To test this study’s conceptual model, the authors conducted an online survey and recruited respondents via Amazon’s Mechanical Turk. This study’s analysis is based on 743 responses. This study used structural equation modeling to test the main hypotheses, conducted decomposition tests using the bootstrapping method to test mediation effects via self-referent beliefs and executed multi-group analyses to examine gender-moderated mediation effects.

Findings

The results confirm that social experience significantly influences all three types of self-referent beliefs (entrepreneurial self-efficacy, SE self-efficacy and self-esteem). Furthermore, the mediating relationship across social experience, self-efficacies, and SE intentions is moderated by gender, as the relationships between social experience and self-efficacies are stronger for women than for men.

Originality/value

A clear gender gap exists in the way how social experience affects perceptual variables (self-referent beliefs), providing a practical suggestion to reduce the perceptual gender gap in social entrepreneurial contexts. This study also reveals the mediating mechanism across social experience, self-efficacies and SE intentions, also highlighting the importance of domain specific self-efficacies. This study’s findings support and extend Milliken’s (1987) framing of three distinct types of uncertainty to explain how individuals form SE intentions.

Keywords

Citation

Ko, E.-J. and Kang, J. (2022), "How gender moderates the mediating mechanism across social experience, self-referent beliefs and social entrepreneurship intentions", Gender in Management, Vol. 37 No. 8, pp. 1045-1063. https://doi.org/10.1108/GM-06-2021-0175

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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