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To Lead, or to Follow?: How Self-Uncertainty and the Dark Triad of Personality Influence Leadership Motivation
Journal article   Peer reviewed

To Lead, or to Follow?: How Self-Uncertainty and the Dark Triad of Personality Influence Leadership Motivation

Laura Guillén Ramo, Philippe Jacquart and Michael Hogg
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol.49(7), pp.1043-1057
01/07/2023

Abstract

dark triad leadership motivation negative affect self-uncertainty
Under uncertainty, leaders who possess dark triad personality traits seem able to attain leadership positions. We draw on uncertainty-identity theory and dark triad research to explore the effect of self-uncertainty on leadership motivation. Uncertainty-identity theory predicts that people can reduce self-uncertainty by identifying with groups and following their leaders, which suggests that self-uncertainty reduces people’s own leadership motivation. However, individuals high in dark triad traits (Machiavellianism, narcissism, and psychopathy) have such a powerful drive for dominance over others that their leadership motivation may be unaffected by self-uncertainty. To test these predictions, we conducted four studies (Ns = 2,641, 421, 513, and 400). We found that self-uncertainty reduced leadership motivation for individuals low in the dark triad. In contrast, those high in the dark triad had an elevated leadership motivation that remained unaltered when they were self-uncertain. These effects were mediated by participants’ negative affect. We discuss the implications of these findings.
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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.73 Social Psychology
6.73.447 Racial Identity
Web of Science research areas
Psychology, Social
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