| Literature DB >> 31121842 |
Ana M Castaño1, Yolanda Fontanil2, Antonio L García-Izquierdo3.
Abstract
Women continue to lag behind for accessing managerial positions, partially due to discrimination at work. One of the main roots of such discrimination is gender stereotyping, so we aim to comprehend those biased procedures. First, we have analyzed those highlighted gender lawsuit cases in the scientific literature that have dealt with stereotypes both in the American and the European work contexts. Second, meta-analytic studies regarding organizational consequences of gender stereotypes have been synthetized. Third, gender stereotypes have been grouped by means of a content analysis of the existing literature after processing 61 articles systematically retrieved from WOS, SCOPUS, and PsycINFO databases. As a result, a taxonomy of gender stereotypes has been achieved evidencing that descriptive and prescriptive stereotypes have an impact on decision-making procedures through the apparently perception of women as less suitable for managerial positions. Moreover, we offer a deep explanation of the gender discrimination phenomenon under the umbrella of psychosocial theories, and some measures for successfully overcoming management stereotyping, showing that organizational culture can be improved from both the perspective of equal employment opportunities and the organizational justice frameworks for reaching a balanced and healthier workplace.Entities:
Keywords: decent work; equal employment opportunities; gender discrimination; healthy organizations; managerial positions; organizational justice; stereotypes; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31121842 PMCID: PMC6572654 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16101813
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Systematic review flow charts.
Summary of North American lawsuit gender cases.
| Case | No. | Description | Court Decision |
|---|---|---|---|
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| 6 | Ms. Hopkins was refused for partnership despite her good economical results, arguing she was aggressive. | The court considered that refusing the partnership of Ms. Hopkins constituted gender discrimination. (+) |
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| 2 | A man complained against a navy’s promotion policy that allows longer time in rank for female officers. | The court held that the different treatment results from the different opportunities for professional service. (+) |
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| 2 | A woman was ranked below male veterans who had lower scores due to the preference to honorably discharged veterans. | The court found no discriminatory purpose. (−) |
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| 2 | A woman applied for a supervisor position, but a male employee from another division was hired. | The court held that the decision was not based on unlawful criteria and the company was not required to hire female applicants equally qualified. (−) |
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| 2 | Several women filed a class action lawsuit for experiencing sex discrimination in pay and promotion. | The court viewed the claims as lacking the necessary commonality to support class certification. (−) |
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| 1 | Mr. Johnson was passed over for a promotion in favor of Ms. Joyce on the basis of an affirmative action plan. | The court considered that the Transportation Agency appropriately took into account Joyce’s sex as determinant for the promotion. (+) |
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| 2 | A woman was forced to take an unpaid leave, as the company policy required being able to lift up more pounds than the pregnant complainant was advised to. | The court established the criteria unconstitutional. (+) |
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| 1 | A complaint against an employer who refused to hire women, but not men, with young children. | The court held that an employer could not refuse to hire females with young children. (+) |
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| 1 | A woman complained for not being rehired after taking pregnancy leave, alleging she had left work voluntarily and without good cause. | The court declared that the denial of her unemployment compensation was not based upon her pregnancy and therefore was not illegal. (−) |
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| 4 | A qualified applicant was denied the admission to the Mississippi University for Women School of Nursing on the basis of sex. | The court found gender discrimination. (+) |
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| 2 | Lawyer Mira Bradwell was refused a license to practice law because she was a woman. | The court held that women did not have the right to practice law. (−) |
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| 2 | A complaint against excluding women from positions as prison guards in maximum security facility. | The court held that having women as prison guards would create security and safety problems. (−) |
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| 2 | A complaint against the exclusion of women from a military college. | The court held that male-only admissions policy was unconstitutional. (+) |
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| 1 | A complaint against a public high school restricted to males. | The court held the gender classification. (−) |
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| 1 | A complaint against male only military registration. | The court held the only male military registration. (−) |
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| 1 | Female county prison guards complained for being paid less than male guards. | The court held that the wage differential is based on a differential based on any other factor than sex. (−) |
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| 1 | A complaint against the prohibition of women, except for infertile women, from engaging in tasks with lead exposure. | The court held that excluding women was sex discrimination. (+) |
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| 1 | A case about increasing the salaries of employees only in male dominated pay schedules. | The court held that discrimination constituted a tort-like injury to respondents. (+) |
Note: Information of the cases has been supplemented by consulting the Oyez multimedia judicial archive of the Supreme Court of the United States website (https://www.oyez.org/); “+” means “perpetuating gender stereotypes struck”; “−” means “perpetuating gender stereotypes upheld”; No. refers to the number of articles which cite the lawsuit case.
Summary of European lawsuit gender cases.
| Case | No. | Description | Court Decision |
|---|---|---|---|
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| 2 | Mr. Kalanke was initially proposed for a promotion, however, Ms. Glissman (holding equal qualifications for the job) was finally promoted. | The sentence considered unlawful a positive discrimination action favoring the promotion of a woman. (−) |
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| 1 | A female candidate with the same merits as Mr. Marschall was proposed for a promotion instead of him because of an affirmative action. | The sentence supported the decision of the Kalanke’s case, although the legality of positive discrimination was recognized. (−) |
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| 4 | A father was denied parental leave on the basis that only mothers were allowed. | The court denied the parental leave of the father. (−) |
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| 4 | Russian serviceman who was responsible for his children claimed equal parenting rights as women. | The court held that maternity leave to mothers not fathers perpetuates gender stereotypes hindering women’s careers and men’s family life. (+) |
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| 1 | Roca Álvarez requested the right to take the parental leave, but his request was refused because the mother of his child was self-employed. | Refusing the father’s leave when the mother was self-employed perpetuated the role of women as the main responsible for parental duties. (+) |
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| 1 | A case about fire brigade duty that was compulsory for men only, arguing the protection of women. | The court found a violation of the Convention. (+) |
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| 1 | A woman was denied a position as a security officer in the state-run electricity company because she was a woman. | The court stated that work night shifts and physical force requirements could not in itself justify the difference in treatment between men and women. (+) |
Note: Information of the cases has been supplemented by consulting the Judgments of the Court in the InfoCuria for case-law of the Court of Justice website (http://curia.europa.eu/juris/recherche.jsf?language=en), the HUDOC for case-law of the European Court of Human Rights database (https://www.echr.coe.int/Pages/home.aspx?p=caselaw/HUDOC&c=), and the briefs of the cases in https://www.womenslinkworldwide.org/; “+” means “perpetuating gender stereotypes struck”; “−” means “perpetuating gender stereotypes upheld”; No. refers to the number of articles which cite the lawsuit case.
Summary of meta-analyses regarding differences between women and men.
| Reference | Results |
|---|---|
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| Eagly AH, Karau SJ, Johnson BT 1992 | Women were more democratic and less autocratic than men, however there were no differences for either interpersonal style or interpersonal versus task style. |
| Eagly AH, Johannesen-Schmidt MC, van Engen ML 2003 | Female leaders were more transformational than male leaders and also engaged in more contingent reward; whereas men manifest greater transactional active and passive leadership and laissez-faire approaches. |
| Van Engen ML, Willemsen TM 2004 | Men tended to use the traditionally masculine styles and women the traditionally feminine styles: women tended to use the stereotypical feminine styles democratic-versus-autocratic and transformational leadership styles. However, no evidence was found for sex differences in interpersonal, task-oriented, and transactional leadership. |
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| Eagly AH, Makhijani MG, Klonsky BG 1992 | There was a small overall tendency to evaluate female leaders less favorably than male leaders, especially when female leadership was carried out in stereotypically masculine styles, in male-dominated roles, and when the evaluators were men. |
| Koenig AM, Eagly AH, Mitchell AA, Ristikari T 2011 | Masculinity of leader stereotypes was found: (a) male-leader similarity; (b) greater agency than communion; and (c) greater masculinity. |
| Koch AJ, D’Mello SD, Sackett PR 2015 * | Men were preferred for male-dominated jobs, and male raters exhibited greater gender-role congruity bias than did female raters for male-dominated jobs. |
| Badura KL, Grijalva E, Newman DA, Yan TT, Jeon G 2018 | Men tended to emerge in leadership roles more often than did women. Moreover, men tended to possess higher levels of agentic traits, whereas women tended to possess higher levels of communal traits. |
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| Eagly AH, Karau SJ, Makhijani MG 1995 | Male and female leaders were equally effective. However, effectiveness comparisons favored men for first-level leadership; and female leaders fared better in feminine expected roles such as education, whereas male leader fared better in masculine expected roles such as military. |
| Paustian-Underdahl SC, Walker LS, Woehr DJ 2014 | Men and women did not differ in perceived leadership effectiveness when all leadership contexts are considered. |
| Schneid M, Isidor R, Li C, Kabst R 2015 * | A negative relationship was found between gender diversity and contextual performance, although no relationship was found with task performance. However, gender diversity has a significant negative relationship with task performance in countries with low gender egalitarianism. |
| Jeong SH, Harrison DA 2017 | Female presence in CEO positions was positively related to long-term financial performance and negatively related to short-term market returns; whereas female presence in top management teams was positively related to long-term financial performance but not to short term market returns. |
| Hoobler JM, Masterson CR, Nkomo SM, Michel EJ 2018 | There was a positive association between having more women on boards of directors and overall financial performance. |
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| Hyde JS 2005 * | There were small or non-differences regarding cognitive variables, verbal or nonverbal communication, social or personality variables, wellbeing, motor behaviors, and moral reasoning. |
| Grijalva E et al., 2015 * | Men tended to be more narcissistic than women, however, men and women did not differ on vulnerable (low self-esteem, neuroticism, and introversion) narcissism. |
| Williams MJ, Tiedens LZ 2016 | Dominance expressed explicitly affected women’s likability, whereas implicit forms of dominance did not. Furthermore, dominant women were found to have worse outcomes on dimensions such hireability. Nonetheless, non significant differences were found regarding men’s and women’s perceived competence. |
| Kugler KG, Reif JAM, Kaschner T, Brodbeck FC 2018 * | Women were less likely to initiate negotiations than men. However, gender differences were smaller for low situational ambiguity and situational cues, consistent with the female gender role. |
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| Hosoda M, Stone-Romero EF, Coats G 2003 * | Attractive people were found to be better than unattractive on job-related outcomes, obtaining similar values for women and men. |
| Nguyen H-HD, Ryan AM 2008 * | The overall performance of women stereotyped test takers might suffer from a situational stereotype threat. |
| Jones KP et al., 2017 * | There was no relationship between sexism and overall workplace discrimination. |
* Studies marked with an asterisk are not specifically referred to managerial positions but they have been included as they could hinder women accessing/in managerial positions.
Journal and number of articles in the content analysis.
| Journal | Number of Articles Retrieved Per Journal | Total of Articles Retrieved |
|---|---|---|
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| 7 | 7 |
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| 4 | 4 |
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| 3 | 6 |
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| 2 | 10 |
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| 1 | 34 |
| Total | 61 |
Descriptive and prescriptive stereotypes categories counting.
| Domains, Categories, and Subcategories of Gender Stereotypes | Units of Analysis Retrieved from the Analyzed Journal Articles | |
|---|---|---|
| Number | % | |
| Descriptive stereotypes | ||
| 1. Personality traits | 408 | 54.33 |
| 1.1. Agreeableness | 137 | 33.58 |
| 1.2. Extraversion | 72 | 17.65 |
| 1.3. Conscientiousness | 68 | 16.67 |
| 1.4. Neuroticism | 50 | 12.25 |
| 1.5. Openness | 24 | 5.88 |
| No subcategory * | 57 | 13.97 |
| 2. Abilities | 230 | 30.63 |
| 2.1. Applied | 205 | 89.13 |
| 2.2. Basic | 12 | 5.22 |
| No subcategory * | 13 | 5.65 |
| 3. Leadership styles | 79 | 10.52 |
| 4. Motivation | 21 | 2.79 |
| 5. Physical appearance | 13 | 1.73 |
| Total | 751 | 65.30 |
| Prescriptive stereotypes | ||
| 1. Adopting stereotypical gender characteristics | 146 | 36.59 |
| 1.1. Masculine | 65 | 44.52 |
| 1.2. Feminine | 51 | 34.93 |
| 1.3. Androgynous | 13 | 8.90 |
| No subcategory * | 17 | 11.64 |
| 2. Roles | 114 | 28.57 |
| 2.1. Family care | 59 | 51.75 |
| 2.2. Working home | 30 | 26.32 |
| No subcategory * | 25 | 21.93 |
| 3. Status | 103 | 25.81 |
| 4. Peer rating | 36 | 9.02 |
| Total | 399 | 34.69 |
Note: Percentages of categories do not add to 100% because they are referred to their upper domain (i.e., descriptive/prescriptive), and percentages of subcategories are referred to their immediately upper category; * No subcategory is used for units of analysis referred to the general category, as it is not possible to classify them into a subcategory.
Classification of discrimination theories.
| Theory | Discrimination Criterion |
|---|---|
| General discrimination theories | |
| -Social Identity Theory | A. The categorization of people into in/out-groups |
| -Status Characteristics Theory | B. The categorization of people regarding the perceived status and/or warmth |
| Gender discrimination theories | |
| -Lack of Fit Model | C. A perceived lack of fit between the women’s attributes and roles and the managerial requirements |
| -Ambivalent Sexism Theory | D. Positive and negative feelings about women |
Taxonomy of gender stereotypes and psychosocial theories of gender discrimination.
| Gender Stereotype | Psychosocial Theories of Gender Discrimination |
|---|---|
| Descriptive stereotypes | |
| 1. Personality traits (i.e., agreeableness, extraversion, conscientiousness, neuroticism, openness) | GBDM, LFM, RCT, SCM, SIT, TMTM |
| 2. Abilities (i.e., applied, basic) | GBDM, LFM, SCM, SCT, SIT, TMTM |
| 3. Leadership styles | GBDM, LFM, SCM, SCT, SIT, TMTM |
| 4. Physical appearance | AST, GBDM, LFM, SIT, TMTM |
| 5. Motivation | GBDM, LFM, SIT, TMTM |
| Prescriptive stereotypes | |
| 1. Adopting stereotypical gender characteristics (i.e., masculine, feminine, androgynous) | LFM, RCT, SCM, SIH, TMTM |
| 2. Roles (i.e., family care, working home) | AST, LFM, RCT, SCM, SCT, SIH, TMTM |
| 3. Status | LFM, SCM, SCT, SIH, TMTM |
| 4. Peer rating | LFM, SCM, TMTM |
Note: Ambivalent Sexism Theory (AST); Group-Based Differential Model (GBDM); Lack of Fit Model (LFM); Role Congruity Theory of Prejudice Toward Female (RCT); Stereotype Content Model (SCM); Status Characteristics Theory (SCT); Status Incongruity Hypothesis (SIH); Social Identity Theory (SIT); Think Manager-Think Male Theory (TMTM).
Summary of guiding principles for the improvement of human resources managerial decisions regarding stereotypes.
| Guiding Principles |
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| Guiding principle 1: |
| Guiding principle 2: |
| Guiding principle 3: |
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Recommendations for good practices at the workplace for buffering gender stereotypes.
| Area | Good Practices | Stereotypes |
|---|---|---|
| Recruitment | -Analyze the percentage of women inside the candidate pool looking for balancing the number of women and men. | MO, RO, ST |
| Personnel selection and assessment | Before the assessment: | |
| -Provide evidence of bias free assessment and criterion oriented methods before their use. | PE, AB, PH | |
| -Carry out workshops for decision-makers in order to identify gender stereotypes. | ALL | |
| -Inform decision-makers about the benefits of gender diverse managerial teams. | ALL | |
| During the assessment: | ||
| -Make decisions from the perspective taking approach. | MO, PR | |
| -Use blind CV with no information about the gender of the candidates. | ALL | |
| -Carry out structured behavioral interviews and apply valid and reliable instruments and methods based on competencies. | PE, AB, LE, MO | |
| -Provide the explanation of the competencies of the selected candidate. | PE, AB, LE, PH, MO | |
| -Balance the presence of women and men in the decision-making tribunal. | AD, RO, ST, PR | |
| After the assessment: | ||
| -Compare the presence of women and men regarding departments and levels. | RO, ST | |
| -Compare retributions of women and men. | PE, AB, ST | |
| -Establish a reference number of women in higher positions to achieve in long-term. | MO, RO, ST | |
| -Empirical assessment of adverse impact. | PE, AB, PH, AD, RO, ST | |
| -Assess perceived barriers for the professional advancement of women. | ALL | |
| Organizational culture and relationships with stakeholders | -Establish gender diversity as an added value inside the good governance code. | ALL |
| Work–family conciliation and professional development | -Establish equal parental leave for women and men. | AD, RO |
| -Avoid meetings both early in the morning and late in the evening. | RO | |
| -Implement non-lineal professional career development. | MO, RO | |
| -Establish mentoring programs for women in pre-managerial positions. | LE, MO, ST | |
| Other areas | -Verify that both retributions of women and men are equal. | AB, ST, PR |
| -Implement an advisory service for women inside the organizations. | MO, RO, PR |
Note: personality traits (PE), abilities (AB), leadership styles (LE), physical appearance (PH), motivation (MO), adopting stereotypical gender characteristics (AD), roles (RO), status (ST), peer rating (PR). When a recommendation is followed by ALL it means that the recommendation is suited for avoiding gender stereotypes categories widely, as the recommendations deals with broad scope topics (e.g., gender, equality, gender diversity).