The Evolution of Leader-Follower Reciprocity: The Theory of Service-for-Prestige

We describe the service-for-prestige theory of leadership, which proposes that voluntary leader-follower relations evolved in humans via a process of reciprocal exchange that generated adaptive benefits for both leaders and followers. We propose that although leader-follower relations first emerged...

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Main Authors: Michael Edmond Price, Mark eVan Vugt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00363/full
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spelling doaj-b29795c78bd24a099cc364c6e12286812020-11-25T03:46:32ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612014-06-01810.3389/fnhum.2014.0036391479The Evolution of Leader-Follower Reciprocity: The Theory of Service-for-PrestigeMichael Edmond Price0Mark eVan Vugt1Brunel UniversityVU University AmsterdamWe describe the service-for-prestige theory of leadership, which proposes that voluntary leader-follower relations evolved in humans via a process of reciprocal exchange that generated adaptive benefits for both leaders and followers. We propose that although leader-follower relations first emerged in the human lineage to solve problems related to information sharing and social coordination, they ultimately evolved into exchange relationships whereby followers could compensate leaders for services which would otherwise have been prohibitively costly for leaders to provide. In this exchange, leaders incur costs to provide followers with public goods, and in return, followers incur costs to provide leaders with prestige (and associated fitness benefits). Because whole groups of followers tend to gain from leader-provided public goods, and because prestige is costly for followers to produce, the provisioning of prestige to leaders requires solutions to the free rider problem of disrespectful followers (who benefit from leader services without sharing the costs of producing prestige). Thus service-for–prestige makes the unique prediction that disrespectful followers of beneficial leaders will be targeted by other followers for punitive sentiment and/or social exclusion. Leader-follower relations should be more reciprocal and mutually beneficial when leaders and followers have more equal social bargaining power. However as leaders gain more relative power, and their high status becomes less dependent on their willingness to pay the costs of benefitting followers, service-for-prestige predicts that leader-follower relations will become based more on leaders’ ability to dominate and exploit rather than benefit followers. We review evidential support for a set of predictions made by service-for-prestige, and discuss how service-for-prestige relates to social neuroscience research on leadership.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00363/fullevolutionary psychologyReciprocityLeadershipDominancesocial statusfollowership
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Edmond Price
Mark eVan Vugt
spellingShingle Michael Edmond Price
Mark eVan Vugt
The Evolution of Leader-Follower Reciprocity: The Theory of Service-for-Prestige
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
evolutionary psychology
Reciprocity
Leadership
Dominance
social status
followership
author_facet Michael Edmond Price
Mark eVan Vugt
author_sort Michael Edmond Price
title The Evolution of Leader-Follower Reciprocity: The Theory of Service-for-Prestige
title_short The Evolution of Leader-Follower Reciprocity: The Theory of Service-for-Prestige
title_full The Evolution of Leader-Follower Reciprocity: The Theory of Service-for-Prestige
title_fullStr The Evolution of Leader-Follower Reciprocity: The Theory of Service-for-Prestige
title_full_unstemmed The Evolution of Leader-Follower Reciprocity: The Theory of Service-for-Prestige
title_sort evolution of leader-follower reciprocity: the theory of service-for-prestige
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2014-06-01
description We describe the service-for-prestige theory of leadership, which proposes that voluntary leader-follower relations evolved in humans via a process of reciprocal exchange that generated adaptive benefits for both leaders and followers. We propose that although leader-follower relations first emerged in the human lineage to solve problems related to information sharing and social coordination, they ultimately evolved into exchange relationships whereby followers could compensate leaders for services which would otherwise have been prohibitively costly for leaders to provide. In this exchange, leaders incur costs to provide followers with public goods, and in return, followers incur costs to provide leaders with prestige (and associated fitness benefits). Because whole groups of followers tend to gain from leader-provided public goods, and because prestige is costly for followers to produce, the provisioning of prestige to leaders requires solutions to the free rider problem of disrespectful followers (who benefit from leader services without sharing the costs of producing prestige). Thus service-for–prestige makes the unique prediction that disrespectful followers of beneficial leaders will be targeted by other followers for punitive sentiment and/or social exclusion. Leader-follower relations should be more reciprocal and mutually beneficial when leaders and followers have more equal social bargaining power. However as leaders gain more relative power, and their high status becomes less dependent on their willingness to pay the costs of benefitting followers, service-for-prestige predicts that leader-follower relations will become based more on leaders’ ability to dominate and exploit rather than benefit followers. We review evidential support for a set of predictions made by service-for-prestige, and discuss how service-for-prestige relates to social neuroscience research on leadership.
topic evolutionary psychology
Reciprocity
Leadership
Dominance
social status
followership
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00363/full
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