组织中的玻璃天花板

Carol T. Kulik, B. Rae
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引用次数: 6

摘要

“玻璃天花板”的比喻代表了20世纪80年代和90年代女性所经历的挫折,她们在平等机会立法赋予她们更多受教育和就业的机会后,大量进入劳动力市场。在最初成功地获得较低的管理职位后,这些女性发现,当她们晋升到组织的更高级别时,她们的职业发展就会放缓。玻璃天花板的正式定义规定,女性在晋升方面的劣势应该在组织的最高层加速,采用这一正式定义的研究人员在组织和国家之间发现了玻璃天花板的混合证据。将“玻璃天花板”定义扩大到少数族裔的研究人员也发现了类似的复杂结果。然而,这些好坏参半的结果并没有削弱这个比喻的价值,它突出了基于刻板印象的做法,这些做法将歧视深深嵌入组织结构中,并理解了为什么世界各地的女性在高级组织角色中的代表性仍然不足。特别是,研究玻璃天花板的研究人员已经确定了各种各样的障碍(包括玻璃悬崖、玻璃墙和玻璃门),从而更全面地了解了女性在职业生涯中遇到的障碍。由于组织提供更短的工作阶梯和更少的工作保障,女性和男性的职业模式都表现出更多的向下、横向和静态的运动。在这种职业背景下,玻璃天花板可能不再是代表女性最有可能遇到的障碍的理想比喻。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Glass Ceiling in Organizations
The “glass ceiling” metaphor represents the frustration experienced by women in the 1980s and 1990s who entered the workforce in large numbers following equal opportunity legislation that gave them greater access to education and employment. After initial success in attaining lower management positions, the women found their career progress slowing as they reached higher levels of their organizations. A formal definition of the glass ceiling specifies that a female disadvantage in promotion should accelerate at the highest levels of the organization, and researchers adopting this formal definition have found mixed evidence for glass ceilings across organizations and across countries. Researchers who have expanded the glass ceiling definition to encompass racial minorities have similarly found mixed results. However, these mixed results do not detract from the metaphor’s value in highlighting the stereotype-based practices that embed discrimination deep within organizational structures and understanding why women continue to be underrepresented in senior organizational roles around the world. In particular, researchers investigating the glass ceiling have identified a variety of obstacles (including glass cliffs, glass walls, and glass doors) that create a more complete understanding of the barriers that women experience in their careers. As organizations offer shorter job ladders and less job security, the career patterns of both women and men are exhibiting more downward, lateral, and static movement. In this career context, the glass ceiling may no longer be the ideal metaphor to represent the obstacles that women are most likely to encounter.
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