Women at Work

Author:

Abendroth Anja-Kristin,Melzer Silvia,Kalev Alexandra,Tomaskovic-Devey Donald1

Affiliation:

1. Anja-Kristin Abendroth is a Faculty Member in the Department of Sociology at Bielefeld University. Silvia Maja Melzer is a Faculty Member in the Department of Sociology at Bielefeld University. Alexandra Kalev is an Associate Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Tel Aviv University. Donald Tomaskovic-Devey is a Professor of Sociology at University of Massachusetts.

Abstract

Using a unique sample of 5,022 workers in 94 large German workplaces, the authors explore whether and how women’s access to higher level positions, firms’ human resources practices, and workers’ qualification levels are associated with gender differences in earnings. First, they find that having more women in management reduces the gender earnings gap for jobs with low qualifications, but not those with high qualifications. Second, they find that while men’s compensation is positively affected by having a male supervisor, women with a female supervisor do not receive such an advantage. Finally, they find that human resources practices and job-level qualifications moderate the association between gendered power and gender earnings inequalities. Integrating women into managerial and supervisory roles does not automatically reduce gender inequalities; its impacts are contingent on organizational context.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management of Technology and Innovation,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Strategy and Management

Reference56 articles.

1. Abendroth Anja-Kristin, Melzer Silvia M., Jacobebbinghaus Peter, Schlechter Fabienne. 2014. Methodological report employee and partner surveys of the linked employer-employee panel (LEEP-B3) in project B3: Interactions between Capabilities in Work and Private Life: A Study of Employees in Different Work Organizations. SFB 882 Technical Report Series, 12. Bielefeld, Germany: DFG Research Center (SFB).

2. HIERARCHIES, JOBS, BODIES:

3. Inequality Regimes

4. Patriarchal Pressures: An Exploration of Organizational Processes that Exacerbate and Erode Gender Earnings Inequality

5. Mentoring and Diversity

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