Report
1 July 2019

On the malleability of implicit attitudes towards women empowerment: Evidence from Tunisia

Author: Eleonora E. M. Nillesen, Michael Grimm, Micheline Goedhuys, Ann-Kristin Reitmann, Aline Meysonnat
Published by: IZA Institute of Labor Economics
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This report uses an implicit association test (IAT) to measure implicit gender attitudes and examine the malleability of these attitudes using a randomized field experiment and quasi-experimental data from Tunisia. Women that appear most conservative respond to a randomized video treatment by reducing their implicit gender bias. Also, female interviewers invite more conservative responses to the IAT, especially among the male subsample. Perceived religiosity of the interviewer affects self-reported gender attitudes, but not IAT measures, suggesting social desirability may be at work. The report discusses the implications of the findings for the use of implicit measures in development research.