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Gender composition at work and women's career satisfaction: An international study of 35 societies
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Gender composition at work and women's career satisfaction: An international study of 35 societies

Jane L. Y. Terpstra‐Tong, Len J. Treviño, Alara Cansu Yaman, Fabian Jintae Froese, David A. Ralston, Nikos Bozionelos, Olivier Furrer, Brian Tjemkes, Fidel León-Darder and Yongjuan Li
Human Resource Management Journal, Vol.35(2), pp.397-427
01/04/2025

Abstract

career satisfaction gender status beliefs intragender competition/ cooperation paradox queen bee phenomenon status characteristics theory
Drawing from status characteristics theory, we develop a multilevel model to explain the relationships between gender composition (e.g., female-female supervisor-subordinate dyads, a female majority at the next higher level, and a female majority at the same job level) in the workplace and women's career satisfaction. We hypothesise that working with a female supervisor and a female majority at the same level will be negatively related to women's career satisfaction, while a female majority at the next higher level will be positively related to women's career satisfaction. Moreover, we propose that formal societal (gender-equality) institutions and informal cultural (gender-egalitarian) values, each has a moderating effect on the impact of gender compositions on women's career satisfaction. Our results from a multilevel analysis of 2291 women across 35 societies support the three hypothesised main effects. Whereas institutions that support gender equality weaken the positive effect of working with a female majority at the next higher level, they amplify the negative effect of a female majority at the same hierarchical level. Our findings highlight the complex and paradoxical nature of gender composition effects on women's career satisfaction. We discuss the theoretical contributions of our findings and their implications for the diversity management practices of multinational enterprises.
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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
Industrial Relations & Labor
Management
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