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Chapter 8 At the Origins of Female Directors' Networks: A Study of the French Case

Authors :
Isabelle Allemand
Bénédicte Brullebaut
Emmanuel Zenou
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2012.

Abstract

Representation of women on boards is getting more and more attention these recent years (Hillman, Shropshire, & Cannella, 2007; Nielsen & Huse, 2010), all the more as recent influence by the legislator accelerates the pace of change. Indeed, in France, a new law adopted in January 2011 stated that the proportion of female directors should not be lower than 40% in all major companies. Most previous research focused on the impact of the presence of women in boards on performance, but there are few studies on female directors' networks. In order to help to better understand the ties at the origin of these networks, we study several characteristics and network ties of female directors of French companies belonging to the SBF 120 index and we compare them with male characteristics. We test the specificity of four types of board of directors' networks: attendance at the same elite educational institutions, use of business networks, civil servants' networks, and interlocking directorates. Our findings suggest that female directors' networks tend to find their origin in business networks more than men. Conversely, male directors have more board interlocking and are more often graduated from elite schools than women. These results show that female directors' networks have specific origins in comparison with men's ones. The exploration of this specificity could be an asset to better understand the role and influence of female directors' networks in governance.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b81172c90865714f158270effa51bd9a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1108/s0196-3821(2012)0000028011