dc.description.abstract | There has never been a more exciting time to study social status and hierarchy.
Over the past several decades, researchers from across the social sciences have
come to recognize the importance, complexity, and ubiquity of individual differences
in social rank. These scholars have made great strides in shedding light on
such fascinating yet long perplexing questions as: Why are societies everywhere
structured hierarchically? What function might hierarchy serve, for individuals and
for groups? How do rank differences emerge, and what determines who rises to the
top? What are the psychological, neural, and hormonal mechanisms that underlie
status attainment? What are the consequences of high and low rank on relationships,
mating, and reproductive success? Psychologists, neuroscientists, health researchers,
sociologists, anthropologists, and management scientists are working together
to seek answers to these questions, and to build a comprehensive and interdisciplinary
science of the psychological underpinnings of social status.
This volume was conceived several years ago when we were attending the annual
Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP) conference, the single
largest annual meeting place for social and personality psychologists. As researchers
broadly interested in the psychology of social status and rank dynamics, we were
naturally attracted to many symposia sessions and presentations themed around the
topic of power and status. One thing we noticed, however, was that the research
agenda seemed to be dominated, to a certain extent, by power—or institutionally
driven rank differentials (exemplified by a boss/employee relationship)—to the neglect
of research on social status and dominance—or naturally emerging hierarchical
differences that arise in everyday interpersonal relationships. Further reflecting
this state of affairs, an excellent volume reviewing the extant literature on power
was published several years ago (Guinote and Vescio 2010), but the present volume
marks the first comprehensive review of research on the psychology of status and
broader rank-attainment processes. | en_US |