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In traditionally male-dominated fields, women are less willing to make sacrifices for their career because discrimination and lower fit with people up the ladder make sacrifices less worthwhile
- Source :
- Journal of applied social psychology, 588-601. WILEY PERIODICALS, INC, STARTPAGE=588;ENDPAGE=601;ISSN=0021-9029;TITLE=Journal of applied social psychology, Journal of Applied Social Psychology
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- WILEY PERIODICALS, INC, 2022.
-
Abstract
- Women's lower career advancement relative to men is sometimes explained by internal factors such as women's lower willingness to make sacrifices for their career, and sometimes by external barriers such as discrimination. In the current research, positing a dynamic interplay between internal and external factors, we empirically test how external workplace barriers guide individuals' internal decisions to make sacrifices for the advancement of their careers. In two high-powered studies in traditionally male-dominated fields (surgery, N = 1,080; veterinary medicine, N = 1,385), women indicated less willingness than men to make sacrifices for their career. Results of structural equation modeling demonstrated that this difference was explained by women's more frequent experience of gender discrimination and lower perceptible fit with people higher up the professional ladder. These barriers predicted reduced expectations of success in their field (Study 1) and expected success of their sacrifices (Study 2), which in turn predicted lower willingness to make sacrifices. The results explain how external barriers play a role in internal career decision making. Importantly, our findings show that these decision-making processes are similar for men and women, yet, the circumstances under which these decisions are made are gendered. That is, both men and women weigh the odds in deciding whether to sacrifice for their career, but structural conditions may influence these perceived odds in a way that favors men. Overall, this advances our understanding of gender differences, workplace inequalities, and research on the role of “choice” and/or structural discrimination behind such inequalities.
- Subjects :
- Gender discrimination
PERCEPTIONS
Social Psychology
Inequality
media_common.quotation_subject
Social Sciences
050109 social psychology
Psychology, Social
050105 experimental psychology
Structural equation modeling
Odds
5. Gender equality
PREJUDICE
GENDER STEREOTYPES
Sacrifice
Psychology
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Career decision
LEADERS
media_common
Gender identity
05 social sciences
BENEVOLENT SEXISM
POSITIONS
CHOICE
FEMALE
Test (assessment)
BACKLASH
WORKPLACE
Social psychology
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 15591816 and 00219029
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Applied Social Psychology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a523ef1eb7b4b4159e4eaf3185799e7b