Bringing women on board: the social policy implications of gender diversity in top jobs
Bringing women on board: the social policy implications of gender diversity in top jobs
This paper argues that analyses of the gendered character of welfare states should be broadened to include women’s share of board and executive roles, as well as the affirmative-action policies (e.g. gender boardroom quotas) that overcome the gender stereotypes (e.g. women are ‘nice’, men are ‘assertive’) and opaque selection procedures at the root of this. Such indicators may seem beyond the remit of social policy analysis, which is concerned foremost with the analysis of ‘social risk’. Yet, drawing on research evidence from across multiple disciplines, this paper argues that achieving a ‘critical mass’ of women in board and executive positions can bring women’s issues onto companies’ agendas and lead to the adoption of female-friendly practices, policies, and cultures at the firm-level. In turn, these practices, policies, and cultures can help to reduce the incidence of gendered social risks (employment/care conflicts, economic dependence on a partner) and sexual harassment among women at lower levels of the labour market. Thus, the paper highlights another dimension to the social-regulatory function of welfare states that has, to date, been overlooked, namely legislative requirements on companies to achieve gender diversity in their leadership structures.
744-762
Kowalewska, Helen
2b6dca95-8312-4eee-b13b-850eca1b9a32
Kowalewska, Helen
2b6dca95-8312-4eee-b13b-850eca1b9a32
Kowalewska, Helen
(2019)
Bringing women on board: the social policy implications of gender diversity in top jobs.
Journal of Social Policy, 49 (4), .
(doi:10.1017/S0047279419000722).
Abstract
This paper argues that analyses of the gendered character of welfare states should be broadened to include women’s share of board and executive roles, as well as the affirmative-action policies (e.g. gender boardroom quotas) that overcome the gender stereotypes (e.g. women are ‘nice’, men are ‘assertive’) and opaque selection procedures at the root of this. Such indicators may seem beyond the remit of social policy analysis, which is concerned foremost with the analysis of ‘social risk’. Yet, drawing on research evidence from across multiple disciplines, this paper argues that achieving a ‘critical mass’ of women in board and executive positions can bring women’s issues onto companies’ agendas and lead to the adoption of female-friendly practices, policies, and cultures at the firm-level. In turn, these practices, policies, and cultures can help to reduce the incidence of gendered social risks (employment/care conflicts, economic dependence on a partner) and sexual harassment among women at lower levels of the labour market. Thus, the paper highlights another dimension to the social-regulatory function of welfare states that has, to date, been overlooked, namely legislative requirements on companies to achieve gender diversity in their leadership structures.
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Submitted date: 31 May 2019
Accepted/In Press date: 27 July 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 October 2019
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Local EPrints ID: 431897
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/431897
ISSN: 0047-2794
PURE UUID: d6d0fbb5-a34a-48bc-8134-acf313cb7c09
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Date deposited: 20 Jun 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 01:43
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Author:
Helen Kowalewska
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