GENDER CULTURES: WOMEN’S CHOICES AND STRATEGIES AT WORK
- 1 February 1993
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Women in Management Review
- Vol. 8 (2)
- https://doi.org/10.1108/09649429310028094
Abstract
Discusses how equality audits of local authorities reveal identifiable gender cultures, such as the “gentleman′s club”, the “locker room”, the “barrack yard”, the “gender‐blind”, and the “smart macho”. Describes how women and men feel that they and their colleagues have been influenced by these cultures, and how they reinforce persistent stereotypes about “women and work”. Gender cultures affect both men and women′s decisions and behaviour at work. The prevailing gender culture in one department may be different from that in another department in the same authority but most authorities had pockets of all the cultures described. The women managers interviewed recognized the dilemmas and difficulties women face when breaking with traditional norms within a workplace with pre‐ordained gender cultures. Reinforces the view that exclusive work culture is powerful in its negative influence over women′s development and promotion prospects, but that preconceptions and sexual stereotypes about men and women′s roles are still determining many women′s behaviour, their lives and reducing their opportunities.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- WOMEN’S FRUSTRATION WITH AND INFLUENCE ON LOCAL GOVERNMENT MANAGEMENT IN THE UK: AN INVESTIGATION FROM A WOMAN MANAGER’S PERSPECTIVEWomen in Management Review, 1993
- In the Way of WomenPublished by Bloomsbury Academic ,1991