The perks and pitfalls of conformity : unravelling the role of gender conformity in friendship satisfaction among adolescents
- Author
- Laora Mastari, Bram Spruyt and Jessy Siongers (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- During adolescence young people not only strongly compare themselves with each other, they also monitor and judge each other based on gender norms. Therefore, this article focuses on the interpersonal dynamics of gender conformity among adolescents. The central research question is whether adolescents conform to gender norms in order to ‘fit in’? First, we study how adolescents come to internalise (pressure for gender conformity from oneself) and externalise gender norms (behaving in gender typical ways). Second, we assess the potential social benefits of gender conformity by studying the association between satisfaction with friendships and different aspects of gender conformity. Multi-group structural equation modelling was used to assess differences between adolescent girls (n = 631) and boys (n = 633) in Belgium (Mage= 19.52). Benevolent sexism predicted adolescents’ internalisation and externalisation of gender norms. For boys, the pressure for gender conformity from others predicted the externalisation of gender norms. In general, adolescents benefited from higher satisfaction with friendships when they endorsed benevolent sexism and translated normative pressures into gender typical behaviours. Our findings urge for increasing awareness to recognize subtle manifestations of sexism and to reduce the pressure young people experience to conform to gender norms.
- Keywords
- Adolescents, gender identity, gender conformity, benevolent sexism, hostile sexism, pressure for gender conformity, BENEVOLENT SEXISM, DIFFERENTIATING HOSTILE, WOMENS ENDORSEMENT, AMBIVALENT SEXISM, IDENTITY, TYPICALITY, ATTITUDES, BELIEFS, BOYS, CONSEQUENCES
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8735711
- MLA
- Mastari, Laora, et al. “The Perks and Pitfalls of Conformity : Unravelling the Role of Gender Conformity in Friendship Satisfaction among Adolescents.” JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES, vol. 26, no. 4, 2023, pp. 538–58, doi:10.1080/13676261.2021.2022110.
- APA
- Mastari, L., Spruyt, B., & Siongers, J. (2023). The perks and pitfalls of conformity : unravelling the role of gender conformity in friendship satisfaction among adolescents. JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES, 26(4), 538–558. https://doi.org/10.1080/13676261.2021.2022110
- Chicago author-date
- Mastari, Laora, Bram Spruyt, and Jessy Siongers. 2023. “The Perks and Pitfalls of Conformity : Unravelling the Role of Gender Conformity in Friendship Satisfaction among Adolescents.” JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES 26 (4): 538–58. https://doi.org/10.1080/13676261.2021.2022110.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Mastari, Laora, Bram Spruyt, and Jessy Siongers. 2023. “The Perks and Pitfalls of Conformity : Unravelling the Role of Gender Conformity in Friendship Satisfaction among Adolescents.” JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES 26 (4): 538–558. doi:10.1080/13676261.2021.2022110.
- Vancouver
- 1.Mastari L, Spruyt B, Siongers J. The perks and pitfalls of conformity : unravelling the role of gender conformity in friendship satisfaction among adolescents. JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES. 2023;26(4):538–58.
- IEEE
- [1]L. Mastari, B. Spruyt, and J. Siongers, “The perks and pitfalls of conformity : unravelling the role of gender conformity in friendship satisfaction among adolescents,” JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES, vol. 26, no. 4, pp. 538–558, 2023.
@article{8735711, abstract = {{During adolescence young people not only strongly compare themselves with each other, they also monitor and judge each other based on gender norms. Therefore, this article focuses on the interpersonal dynamics of gender conformity among adolescents. The central research question is whether adolescents conform to gender norms in order to ‘fit in’? First, we study how adolescents come to internalise (pressure for gender conformity from oneself) and externalise gender norms (behaving in gender typical ways). Second, we assess the potential social benefits of gender conformity by studying the association between satisfaction with friendships and different aspects of gender conformity. Multi-group structural equation modelling was used to assess differences between adolescent girls (n = 631) and boys (n = 633) in Belgium (Mage= 19.52). Benevolent sexism predicted adolescents’ internalisation and externalisation of gender norms. For boys, the pressure for gender conformity from others predicted the externalisation of gender norms. In general, adolescents benefited from higher satisfaction with friendships when they endorsed benevolent sexism and translated normative pressures into gender typical behaviours. Our findings urge for increasing awareness to recognize subtle manifestations of sexism and to reduce the pressure young people experience to conform to gender norms.}}, author = {{Mastari, Laora and Spruyt, Bram and Siongers, Jessy}}, issn = {{1367-6261}}, journal = {{JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES}}, keywords = {{Adolescents,gender identity,gender conformity,benevolent sexism,hostile sexism,pressure for gender conformity,BENEVOLENT SEXISM,DIFFERENTIATING HOSTILE,WOMENS ENDORSEMENT,AMBIVALENT SEXISM,IDENTITY,TYPICALITY,ATTITUDES,BELIEFS,BOYS,CONSEQUENCES}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{4}}, pages = {{538--558}}, title = {{The perks and pitfalls of conformity : unravelling the role of gender conformity in friendship satisfaction among adolescents}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1080/13676261.2021.2022110}}, volume = {{26}}, year = {{2023}}, }
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