Gendering Organizational Analysis
Edited by:
June 1992 | 309 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
"This book offers some of the most forward-looking work available on the topics of gendered organizations and the interrelationship of gender and race. . . . In Gendering Organizational Analysis, one may get a glimpse of the broader domain of gender in organizations, an area infrequently reflected in research conducted in the United States. . . . Gendering Organizational Analysis is not simply applicable to the organizations of others. It also offers insight on the gendering of the institutions within which knowledge is produced."
--Academy of Management Review
"Gendering Organizational Analysis makes a distinct contribution. . . . The collection succeeds in demonstrating 'that gender makes an overwhelming difference to organizational reality'. . . . Gendering Organizational Analysis is most useful for its accessibility. I will use this book to teach undergraduates in organizational studies. . . . It would also be a useful addition to courses emphasizing the interdisciplinary contributions of gender and feminist studies."
--Contemporary Sociology
What impact do gender issues have on organizational structure and performance? Why should gender matter in organizational settings? And, how can we better understand organizations through a recognition of women's roles within them? In Gendering Organizational Analysis, the editors approach these questions from a variety of perspectives--structural and post-structural, social, psychological, interactionist, radical, and post-modernist. Contributors examine the core issue of how race and ethnicity are intertwined with gender in organizational settings and outline the concrete differences this issue makes in male-dominated work settings. They propose that numerous errors have been made in interpreting organizational operations because traditional approaches to organizational theory are ethnic- and gender-blind.
Bringing together the top thinkers and writers on this crucial topic, Gendering Organizational Analysis will interest students and professionals in management, organizational studies, women's studies, sociology, and public administration.
Introduction
PART ONE: ORGANIZATIONAL ANALYSIS: A CRITIQUE
Joan Acker and Donald R Van Houten
Differential Recruitment and Control
Peta Tancred-Sheriff and E Jane Campbell
Room For Women
Jeff Hearn and P Wendy Parkin
Gender and Organizations
PART TWO: TOWARDS FEMINISM AS RADICAL ORGANIZATIONAL ANALYSIS
Gibson Burrell
Sex and Organizational Analysis
Albert J Mills
Organization, Gender and Culture
Judith Grant and Peta Tancred-Sheriff
A Feminist Perspective on State Bureaucracy
PART THREE: FROM THEORY TO APPLICATION: EXPLORATIONS IN FEMINIST ORGANIZATIONAL ANALYSIS
Barbara A Gutek and Aaron Groff Cohen
Sex Ratios, Sex Role Spillover and Sex at Work
Deborah Sheppard
Women Managers' Perceptions of Gender and Organizational Life
Susan Porter Benson
`The Clerking Sisterhood'
Clare Burton
Merit and Gender
PART FOUR: CONTEMPORARY VOICES
Marta B Calás
An/Other Silent Voice?
Marta B Calás and Linda Smircich
Using the `F' Word
Ella Louise Bell and Stella Nkomo
Re-Visioning Women Managers' Lives
Joan Acker
Gendering Organizational Theory