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Breaking Through Only to Break up: A Cross-Country Analysis of the Speed of Advancement and Exit of Female Executives
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Breaking Through Only to Break up: A Cross-Country Analysis of the Speed of Advancement and Exit of Female Executives

Esha Mendiratta, Shibashish Mukherjee and Jana D. R. Oehmichen
Human Resource Management, Vol.64(3), pp.769-791
08/05/2025

Abstract

cross- country analysis executive director tenure female career advancement gender gap
We examine the speed of advancements and exits of female executive directors vis‐à‐vis comparable men. In line with recent research, we suggest that women are likely to experience an apparent gender‐based advantage in the form of lower age at the time of their first‐ever executive director appointment. However, we argue that this advantage may be transitory. Appointed women also experience faster exits from these positions, with age partially mediating the differential speed of exits between male and female executive directors. We also contend that these effects are contingent on countries' local gender norms (especially women's economic participation) such that lower gender parity leads to even lower ages at appointments and faster exits for female executive directors. Results based on 15,202 unique rookie executive directors from 33 countries between 2002 and 2015 largely support these predictions.
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[Mendiratta Mukherjee Oehmichen 2025] Breaking Through Only to Break up- A Cross- Country Analysis of the Speed of Advancement and Exit of Female Executives646.45 kB
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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

Contributed to the advancement of the following goal(s):

#5 Gender Equality
#10 Reduced Inequalities

Source: InCites

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.178 Gender & Sexuality Studies
6.178.443 Workplace Gender Roles
Web of Science research areas
Management
Psychology, Applied
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