Academic career & social networks

DOI

This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual networks support the career progress (i.e. time to promotion). Previous studies have argued that men and women benefit from different network structures. However, the empirical evidence about these differences has been contradictory or inconclusive at best. Combining social networks with tokenism, we show in a longitudinal academic study that gender-related differences in the way that networks affect career progress exist only in situations where women are in a token position. Our empirical results further show that women not in severely underrepresented situations benefit from the same network structure as men.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/None
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=66ffbc6d33d8589121ea60a09611f82d70e9b6656be981917234143a8a5d6993
Provenance
Creator Schoen, Constantin
Publisher Service de données FORS; FORS data service; FORS Datenservice
Publication Year 2018
Rights Additional Restrictions: Academic research and teaching; Zusätzliche Einschränkungen: Für akademische Forschung und Lehre; Restrictions supplémentaires: Recherche et enseignement académiques; Special permission: None; Sondergenehmigung: Keine; Permission spéciale: Aucune
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage Switzerland; Schweiz; Suisse; Europe; Europa; Europe; Western Europe; Westeuropa; Europe occidentale