Is There a Glass Cliff in Municipal Management? Examining the Hiring and Departure of Women City Managers

L. Yang, L. Connolly, Jennifer Connolly
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Abstract

Women are underrepresented in public sector leadership, including the field of city management. There are several explanations for what might prevent women from achieving gender parity in city management. We examine one such explanation - a “glass cliff” phenomenon whereby councils are more likely to hire women as city managers during crises, potentially setting women up for failure in the profession. Using original observational data on city managers in Florida, we test whether municipalities are more likely to hire women during times of fiscal stress and whether women are more likely than men to leave the position if municipal finances do not improve. Our results show that increasing budget deficits are associated with municipalities hiring women managers. Post-appointment, a lack of improvement in the deficit condition is associated with a higher probability of women, but not men, leaving the position. This suggests that a glass cliff in city management may be one important factor that prevents women from advancing within the field.
市政管理存在玻璃悬崖吗?考察女性城市管理者的聘用与离职
妇女在公共部门领导,包括城市管理领域的代表性不足。对于可能阻碍女性在城市管理中实现性别平等的原因,有几种解释。我们研究了其中一种解释——“玻璃悬崖”现象,即议会在危机期间更有可能聘请女性担任城市管理者,这可能会让女性在这一职业中遭遇失败。利用对佛罗里达州城市管理者的原始观察数据,我们测试了市政当局在财政压力时期是否更有可能雇佣女性,以及如果市政财政状况没有改善,女性是否比男性更有可能离开这个职位。我们的研究结果表明,预算赤字的增加与市政当局雇用女性管理人员有关。任命后,赤字状况没有改善,女性离职的可能性更高,而男性则不然。这表明,城市管理中的玻璃悬崖可能是阻碍女性在该领域发展的一个重要因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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