Gender equality leads to more Olympic medals for men and women

Gender equality boosts a country’s Olympic medal count for both women and men, shows a new study from the Sauder School of Business.

Guardar

Gender equality boosts a country’s Olympic medal count for both women and men, shows a new study from the Sauder School of Business.

Drawing data from the World Economic Forum’s 2013 Global Gender Gap Report, researchers compared a country’s tendency toward sexual equality with its medal counts from the London 2012 Olympic Games and the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games.

Countries with greater parity – particularly for measures of educational equality – had more women and men reach the podium.

"Our study makes apparent that gender equality has a tendency to lift everyone up within a country," says Sauder Professor Jennifer Berdahl, the study’s lead author. "Olympic glory is likely only one example of how whole societies can benefit from greater parity between the sexes."

The researchers analyzed a sample of 121 countries and their medal counts from the London and Sochi Games. To ensure the significance of the impact of gender equality, they isolated it from other factors such as income equality, gross domestic product, population and latitude.

"Amazingly, gender equality was the most significant and robust predictor of a country’s Olympic success after gross domestic product," notes Berdahl, who is Sauder’s Montalbano Professor of Leadership Studies: Women and Diversity.

Berdahl suggests that gender stereotypes may limit the number of women and men viewed as potential high performance athletes, ultimately reducing a nation’s talent pool.

"In societies with rigid gender roles, women are encouraged to be demure and men who are considered feminine are selected out early when it comes to sport," says Berdahl. "When there’s more equality, performance rises to the surface as the prime indicator of who should advance to elite levels of athletics."

Background

The study, Win-win: Female and male athletes from more gender equal nations perform better in international sports competitions, will be published in the January edition of the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. It was co-authored with Eric Luis Uhlmann, associate professor of Organizational Behavior at INSEAD; and Sauder PhD student Feng Bai.

20 Years at #1: Your best source of news about the Olympics is www.aroundtherings.com, for subscribers only

Guardar

Últimas Noticias

Sinner-Alcaraz, the duel that came to succeed the three phenomenons

Beyond the final result, Roland Garros left the feeling that the Italian and the Spaniard will shape the great duel that came to help us through the duel for the end of the Federer-Nadal-Djokovic era.
Sinner-Alcaraz, the duel that came to succeed the three phenomenons

Table tennis: Brazil’s Bruna Costa Alexandre will be Olympic and Paralympic in Paris 2024

She is the third in her sport and the seventh athlete to achieve it in the same edition; in Santiago 2023 she was the first athlete with disabilities to compete at the Pan American level and won a medal.
Table tennis: Brazil’s Bruna Costa Alexandre will be Olympic and Paralympic in Paris 2024

Rugby 7s: the best player of 2023 would only play the medal match in Paris

Argentinian Rodrigo Isgró received a five-game suspension for an indiscipline in the circuit’s decisive clash that would exclude him until the final or the bronze match; the Federation will seek to make the appeal successful.
Rugby 7s: the best player of 2023 would only play the medal match in Paris

Rhonex Kipruto, owner of the world record for the 10000 meters on the road, was suspended for six years

The Kenyan received the maximum sanction for irregularities in his biological passport and the Court considered that he was part of a system of “deliberate and sophisticated doping” to improve his performance. He will lose his record and the bronze medal at the Doha World Cup.
Rhonex Kipruto, owner of the world record for the 10000 meters on the road, was suspended for six years

Katie Ledecky spoke about doping Chinese swimmers: “It’s difficult to go to Paris knowing that we’re going to compete with some of these athletes”

The American, a seven-time Olympic champion, referred to the case of the 23 positive controls before the Tokyo Games that were announced a few weeks ago and shook the swimming world. “I think our faith in some of the systems is at an all-time low,” he said.
Katie Ledecky spoke about doping Chinese swimmers: “It’s difficult to go to Paris knowing that we’re going to compete with some of these athletes”