职业成功与少数民族地位:回顾与概念框架

IF 9 1区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS
Mina Beigi, Melika Shirmohammadi, Mostafa Ayoobzadeh, Amir Hedayati Mehdiabadi, Wee Chan Au, Huainan Wang, Qingyang Xu, Yafan Yu, Jane Parry, Ben Whitburn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近年来,管理领域对历史上被边缘化的少数群体的职业成功进行了大量研究。然而,到目前为止,从这项研究中获得的见解仍然是零散的,并没有整合到现有的职业成功框架中。我们的目标是补充职业成功奖学金,并通过对四个历史上未被充分代表的少数群体(女性、种族和少数民族、残疾人和LGBTQ+社区)的职业成功的因素和途径进行系统综述,为其包容性做出贡献。为了证明职业成功差异可以归因于少数群体的地位,我们提出了一个框架,突出了与少数群体职业成功相关的职业发展、人力和心理资源,以及限制这些资源获取和使用的系统性障碍。我们认为超可见性、不可见性和管理可见性是基于身份机制的可区分形式,为边缘化身份状态对职业成功的影响提供了理论解释。我们的框架整合了主观职业成功的表现形式——除了现有文献所显示的之外,还考虑了生存、集体利益和可调适性——强调边缘化群体、社区和其他与身份相关的背景的成员身份塑造了职业成功的主观意义。我们的研究对决策者和组织有意弥合少数民族和非少数民族群体的职业成功差距具有实际意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Career Success and Minority Status: A Review and Conceptual Framework
In recent years, the management field has witnessed a surge in studies examining career success among workers from historically marginalized minority groups. However, to date, insights gained from this research remain fragmented and have not been integrated into the existing career success frameworks. We aim to complement career success scholarship and contribute to its inclusivity by conducting a systematic review that synthesizes the factors and pathways contributing to the career success of four historically underrepresented minority groups: women, racial and ethnic minorities, individuals with disabilities, and the LGBTQ+ community. Evidencing that career success disparity can be attributed to minority status, we propose a framework that highlights the career advancement and human and psychological resources associated with minority groups’ career success, as well as the systemic barriers limiting access to and use of such resources. We suggest hypervisibility, invisibility, and managed visibility as distinguishable forms of identity-based mechanisms that offer theoretical explanations for the influence of marginalized identity status on career success. Our framework integrates manifestations of subjective career success—accounting for survival, the collective good, and adjustability in addition to what extant literature has shown—emphasizing that membership in marginalized groups, communities, and other identity-relevant contexts shapes the subjective meaning of career success. Our review has practical implications for decision makers and organizations intending to bridge minority and nonminority groups’ career success disparity.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
22.40
自引率
5.20%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Journal of Management (JOM) aims to publish rigorous empirical and theoretical research articles that significantly contribute to the field of management. It is particularly interested in papers that have a strong impact on the overall management discipline. JOM also encourages the submission of novel ideas and fresh perspectives on existing research. The journal covers a wide range of areas, including business strategy and policy, organizational behavior, human resource management, organizational theory, entrepreneurship, and research methods. It provides a platform for scholars to present their work on these topics and fosters intellectual discussion and exchange in these areas.
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