Women's representation in managerial hierarchies: An examination of trickle-down and pipeline effects

IF 6 2区 管理学 Q1 MANAGEMENT Human Resource Management Pub Date : 2024-04-04 DOI:10.1002/hrm.22220
Kevin Stainback, Helen Roberts, Pallab Kumar Biswas
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Abstract

The trickle-down effect has been proposed as one means to address women's continued underrepresentation in leadership positions globally. While earlier research supported the trickle-down effect's prediction that increasing women's representation at higher managerial levels will positively impact women's careers at lower managerial levels, recent studies provide inconsistent evidence, leading to claims that it may be spurious. Due to data limitation, most prior trickle-down research has explored just two managerial levels—board and executives—making it difficult to separate a trickle-down effect from external pressures (e.g., shareholders, law) or internal factors (e.g., organizational culture) that may cause it. Furthermore, prior research does not adequately account for women's representation in managerial pipelines, a crucial source of potential managerial talent. To address these concerns, we analyze Australian workplace panel data (2014–2020) that allow for a more robust test of the trickle-down effect than previously examined. Our results support the trickle-down effect across multiple managerial levels below the board level, independent of managerial pipeline effects. The trickle-down and pipeline effects were only observed for positions immediately above and below each managerial level. This highlights the proximity of positions within management hierarchies where the in-group preference and women's direct advocacy for other women are most likely to occur. Our study suggests that simply appointing more women to top positions, such as boards, while beneficial, is not enough to address gender inequality in management meaningfully. We recommend that rather than focusing on gender representation at the top, organizations should set gender diversity goals and monitor progress at all managerial levels. We conclude with implications for theory, practice, and future research.

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妇女在管理层中的代表性:对涓滴效应和管道效应的研究
涓滴效应被认为是解决全球领导职位中女性比例持续偏低问题的一种手段。早期的研究支持涓滴效应的预测,即增加女性在较高管理级别的任职人数将对女性在较低管理级别的职业生涯产生积极影响,但最近的研究提供了不一致的证据,导致有人声称涓滴效应可能是虚假的。由于数据的限制,先前的涓滴效应研究大多只探讨了两个管理层次--董事会和高管,因此很难将涓滴效应与可能导致这种效应的外部压力(如股东、法律)或内部因素(如组织文化)区分开来。此外,以往的研究并未充分考虑女性在管理人才梯队中的代表性,而这正是潜在管理人才的重要来源。为了解决这些问题,我们分析了澳大利亚的职场面板数据(2014-2020 年),从而对涓滴效应进行了比以往研究更有力的检验。我们的研究结果支持董事会以下多个管理层次的涓滴效应,而不受管理人才梯队效应的影响。涓滴效应和管道效应只在每个管理级别的上下职位中出现。这突出表明,在管理层级中,最有可能出现群体内偏好和女性直接支持其他女性的职位距离很近。我们的研究表明,仅仅任命更多女性担任高层职位(如董事会)虽然有益,但不足以有意义地解决管理中的性别不平等问题。我们建议,组织不应只关注高层的性别代表性,而应制定性别多元化目标,并监督所有管理级别的进展情况。最后,我们提出了对理论、实践和未来研究的启示。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
11.50
自引率
9.10%
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0
期刊介绍: Covering the broad spectrum of contemporary human resource management, this journal provides academics and practicing managers with the latest concepts, tools, and information for effective problem solving and decision making in this field. Broad in scope, it explores issues of societal, organizational, and individual relevance. Journal articles discuss new theories, new techniques, case studies, models, and research trends of particular significance to practicing HR managers
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