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Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments
The gender and racial composition of the American workforce is
rapidly changing. As more women in particular enter the workforce
and as they enter jobs that have traditionally been dominated by
men, issues related to sex and gender in work settings have become
increasingly important and complex. Research addressing sex and
gender in the workplace is conducted in several distinct
disciplines, ranging from psychology and sociology to management
and economics. Further, books on gender at work often reflect
either a more traditional management perspective or a more recent
feminist perspective; rarely however, are these two orientations on
women and work acknowledged within the same text. Thus, the
principle goal of the book is to communicate a variety of social
psychological literatures and research on gender issues that affect
work behaviors to upper-level undergraduate and graduate students
in applied psychology and business.
The gender and racial composition of the American workforce is
rapidly changing. As more women in particular enter the workforce
and as they enter jobs that have traditionally been dominated by
men, issues related to sex and gender in work settings have become
increasingly important and complex. Research addressing sex and
gender in the workplace is conducted in several distinct
disciplines, ranging from psychology and sociology to management
and economics. Further, books on gender at work often reflect
either a more traditional management perspective or a more recent
feminist perspective; rarely however, are these two orientations on
women and work acknowledged within the same text. Thus, the
principle goal of the book is to communicate a variety of social
psychological literatures and research on gender issues that affect
work behaviors to upper-level undergraduate and graduate students
in applied psychology and business.
Although diversity is the current buzzword in management theory, we still have only a slight understanding of how demographic differences within organizations influence individuals' attitudes and behavior toward each other and the organization as a whole. Demographic Differences in Organizations fills this void. Meticulously researched and authored by two respected scholars-one working in this country, the other in Hong Kong-this book addresses the problems and benefits associated with an increasingly diverse global workforce. Unlike most other researchers in the field, Anne Tsui and Barbara Gutek are interested in the effects of demographic diversity on all members of an organization, not just minority or newly arrived groups. This broad-based, highly readable study should be read by managers, academics in business management and social psychology, and students of business at the undergraduate and graduate level.
This illuminating monograph introduces a status-equilibrating, social capital explanation for the persistent gender stratification in the field of information technology. The authors analyze why the workforce has become increasingly male-dominated over time by looking at how pre-employment conditions provide different experiences and opportunities for women and men. Employing a large-scale, longitudinal data set, this book forays further into the field than other contemporary studies, where all too often the debate focuses on broad and potentially too-far-reaching differences between men and women that are difficult to prove, making for spirited conversation but little else. The authors collect, analyze and present data on social interactions, sex-role attitudes and behavior, leadership, demographics, program retention, job placement, and career attitudes for five cohorts of undergraduate students spanning their last two years in a management information science program and through the job search process. By testing novel theory against their data, the authors demonstrate how structural factors interact with individual characteristics to determine not only who enters the field, but also how they enter it and whether they are likely to stay. These and other analyses ultimately lead to concrete suggestions for addressing gender stratification in the IT industry. Raising - and answering - stimulating questions that will invariably enrich the field, this discerning volume will appeal to IT professionals and those in management roles in the discipline, as well as students and scholars of sociology, management, women's studies, and social and organizational psychology.
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