38 research outputs found
A Qualitative Examination of the Importance of Female Role Models in Investment Banks
A number of practitioner surveys across a range of industries have cited the lack of
senior female role models as a barrier to career progression. There is very little
academic literature to explain this at a senior organizational level. An initial review of
the extant role model literature led to the inclusion of two further related areas â
organizational demographics, as a contextual factor affecting the availability of role
models, and work identity development as a link between the lack of senior female
role models and the lack of career progression.
In seeking to answer the question of why and then how female role models are
important for senior women, this study fills an identified gap in the comprehension of
the concept of role models and their importance in the workplace. It addresses a need
to understand both the key elements of the concept and the mechanism by which they
come into play.
The research uses qualitative methods, specifically in-depth semi-structured
interviews. These were conducted with a senior group of 33 female directors from six
global investment banks, in order to elicit their experiences of role models in
demographically imbalanced work contexts.
Analysis of interview data considered all three areas of role models, demographic
context and work identity development. As the women forged their identities in the
male-dominated context of global investment banks, what became clear was that who
they are and have become was informed by the critical relationships they have had.
Whilst clearly some of the women had found male role models with whom to develop
these critical relationships, there were some identity issues, particular salient to
women, which could not be addressed by men. Thus the findings demonstrated the
utility of female role models.
This thesis has a number of contributions to make on varying levels:
On a conceptual level, this study adds to our understanding of the value of role
models, particularly detailing the affective or symbolic value. It has added to the
conceptualization of role models, detailing what were the core attributes of individuals chosen to be role models, who they were in relation to the women, how
the women used them and why they were important.
It has combined the three literature areas of role models, organizational demographics
and work identity development in a way not previously done, and has shown
empirically that they are related and explain each other. Organizational demographics
affect the availability of role models. And it is suggested that the relatively new
theory of relational identification is the mechanism that explicates how the presence
of positive female role models is a key influence on womenâs work identity
development.
It has clarified the value of role models in extreme gender demographic contexts, and
how and why they are important to senior womenâs professional development, thereby
adding to the theory of role modelling.
Practically, the study explains why women in surveys may have been citing the lack
of female role models as such a prominent issue, and suggests what some of the issues
are that organizations should pay heed to in trying to address this
Standard Chartered Bank: Women on Corporate Boards in India 2010
This first Standard Chartered Bank: Women on Corporate Boards in India 2010
report looks at the representation of women on the boards of India's leading
companies on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE-100) . It ranks the companies in
terms of the gender diversity of their boards, with those with the highest
percentage of women on their boards appearing at the top. The report also
examines the general topic of gender diversity on the boards of the BSE-100 by
presenting the findings of interviews with 18 female directors of BSE-100
companies
Regulation and the trickle-down effect of women in leadership roles
We use an event study design to provide evidence demonstrating how the trickle-down effect is influenced by the introduction of regulation on board gender diversity. In 2011, a new regulation was suddenly introduced for firms listed on the United Kingdomâs FTSE 350 index, the regulatory intervention put forward recommendations to increase the representation of women on the boards of FTSE 350 listed firms â the most critical recommendation was a voluntary target of having twenty-five percent of board positions held by women. We argue this change in regulation represents an exogenous shock, we utilize this shock to investigate how regulation influences the trickle-down of womenâs representation from board level to senior management. We find evidence of a positive relationship between women on boards and womenâs representation in senior management during the pre-regulation era â otherwise referred to as the trickle-down effect. However, the introduction of regulation had the unintended consequence of weakening the relationship between women on boards and women in senior management. Our results suggest that the trickle-down effect varies between different contexts and settings. We discuss the implications for research and practice
A qualitative examination of the importance of female role models in investment banks
A number of practitioner surveys across a range of industries have cited the lack of senior female role models as a barrier to career progression. There is very little academic literature to explain this at a senior organizational level. An initial review of the extant role model literature led to the inclusion of two further related areas â organizational demographics, as a contextual factor affecting the availability of role models, and work identity development as a link between the lack of senior female role models and the lack of career progression. In seeking to answer the question of why and then how female role models are important for senior women, this study fills an identified gap in the comprehension of the concept of role models and their importance in the workplace. It addresses a need to understand both the key elements of the concept and the mechanism by which they come into play. The research uses qualitative methods, specifically in-depth semi-structured interviews. These were conducted with a senior group of 33 female directors from six global investment banks, in order to elicit their experiences of role models in demographically imbalanced work contexts. Analysis of interview data considered all three areas of role models, demographic context and work identity development. As the women forged their identities in the male-dominated context of global investment banks, what became clear was that who they are and have become was informed by the critical relationships they have had. Whilst clearly some of the women had found male role models with whom to develop these critical relationships, there were some identity issues, particular salient to women, which could not be addressed by men. Thus the findings demonstrated the utility of female role models. This thesis has a number of contributions to make on varying levels: On a conceptual level, this study adds to our understanding of the value of role models, particularly detailing the affective or symbolic value. It has added to the conceptualization of role models, detailing what were the core attributes of individuals chosen to be role models, who they were in relation to the women, how the women used them and why they were important. It has combined the three literature areas of role models, organizational demographics and work identity development in a way not previously done, and has shown empirically that they are related and explain each other. Organizational demographics affect the availability of role models. And it is suggested that the relatively new theory of relational identification is the mechanism that explicates how the presence of positive female role models is a key influence on womenâs work identity development. It has clarified the value of role models in extreme gender demographic contexts, and how and why they are important to senior womenâs professional development, thereby adding to the theory of role modelling. Practically, the study explains why women in surveys may have been citing the lack of female role models as such a prominent issue, and suggests what some of the issues are that organizations should pay heed to in trying to address this.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
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Experiencing privilege at ethnic, gender and senior intersections
Purpose: In management studies, assumptions surround the fixed, categorical and binary nature of male, ethnic and other privileges. Compared to white, middle-class men, âOthersâ are typically assumed not to experience privilege. We counter this assumption by applying intersectionality to examine privilegeâs juxtaposition with disadvantage. We offer an elaborated conceptualisation of organisational privilege and insight into the agency employed by individuals traditionally perceived as non-privileged.
Approach: Using diaries and interviews, we analyse twenty micro-episodes from four senior minority ethnic women and menâs accounts of intersecting ethnic, gender and senior identities. We identify how privilege plays out at the juxtaposition of (male gender and hierarchical) advantage with (female gender and ethnic) disadvantage.
Findings: The fluidity of privilege is revealed through contextual, contested and conferred dimensions. Additionally, privilege is experienced in everyday micro-level encounters and we illustrate how 'sometimes privileged' individuals manage their identities at intersections.
Research Limitations: This in-depth analysis draws on a small sample of unique British minority ethnic individuals to illustrate dimensions of privilege.
Practical and social implications: It is often challenging to discuss privilege. However, our focus on atypical wielders of power challenges binary assumptions of privilege. This can provide a common platform for dominant and non-dominant group members to share how societal and organisational privileges differentially impact groups. This inclusive approach could reduce dominant group membersâ psychological and emotional resistance to social justice.
Originality: Through bridging privilege and intersectionality perspectives, we offer a complex and nuanced perspective that contrasts against prevalent conceptions of privilege as invisible and uncontested