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Journal ArticleDOI

Explaining gender segregation.

TLDR
Three major theoretical approaches to understanding occupational gender segregation are examined: human capital/rational choice, patriarchy, and preference theories are found to be inadequate; they tend to confuse overall segregation with its vertical component, and each entails a number of other faults.
Abstract
Occupational gender segregation--the tendency for women and men to work in different occupations--is an important feature of all societies, and particularly the wealthy industrialized ones. To understand this segregation, and to explain its significance, we need to distinguish between vertical segregation entailing inequality and horizontal segregation representing difference without inequality, with overall segregation being the resultant of these components. Three major theoretical approaches to understanding occupational gender segregation are examined: human capital/rational choice, patriarchy, and preference theories. All are found to be inadequate; they tend to confuse overall segregation with its vertical component, and each entails a number of other faults. It is generally assumed or implied that greater empowerment of women would reduce gender segregation. This is the reverse of what actually happens; in countries where the degree of women's empowerment is greater, the level of gender segregation is also greater. An alternative theoretical approach based on processes of social reproduction is shown to be more useful.

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Journal ArticleDOI

1 Constitutional Amendments: “Materializing” Organizational Communication

TL;DR: The communication-as-constitutive principle of organizational communication has been studied in management studies as discussed by the authors, which highlights how communication generates defining realities of organizational life, such as culture, power, networks, and the structure-agency relation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex segregation in friendships and normative contexts across the life span

TL;DR: In this article, the authors draw from a social-constructionist model to synthesize literature documenting sex segregation in friendships and aspects of individuals' socio-cultural contexts in childhood, adolescence, and early and later adulthood.

Vertical and Horizontal Inequalities in Ten National Labor Markets

Maria Charles
TL;DR: For instance, the authors found that unequal distributions across the manual-non-manual divide (horizontal segregation) and status differentials within these sectors (vertical segregation) together account for a considerable share of occupational gender inequality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can’t live with ‘em; can’t live without ‘em: gendered segmentation in the legal profession

Sharon C. Bolton, +1 more
- 01 Feb 2007 - 
TL;DR: The authors argue that gendered segmentation has become a defence mechanism of an embattled profession, ensuring that the elite segments hold onto their status and associated rewards while the feminized segments increase leverage without rocking the partnership system, effectively forming a reserve army of legal labour with lesser terms and conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deciphering Sex Segregation Vertical and Horizontal Inequalities in Ten National Labor Markets

TL;DR: In this article, a two-dimensional conceptualization of occupational sex segregation is proposed, in particular, an analytical distinction between vertical and horizontal gender inequalities is made, based on data from 10 industrialized countries and claims regarding the hybrid nature of sex segregation and the cultural and structural factors that influence its various components are empirically assessed.
References
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Book

Development as Freedom

Amartya Sen
TL;DR: In this paper, Amartya Sen quotes the eighteenth century poet William Cowper on freedom: Freedom has a thousand charms to show, That slaves howe'er contented, never know.
Posted Content

Family Investments in Human Capital: Earnings of Women

TL;DR: In this paper, it is recognized that an individual's use of time, and particularly the allocation of time between market and nonmarket activities, is also best understood within the context of the family as a matter of interdependence with needs, activities, and characteristics of other family members.
Journal ArticleDOI

Family Investments in Human Capital: Earnings of Women

TL;DR: In this article, it is recognized that an individual's use of time, and particularly the allocation of time between market and nonmarket activities, is also best understood within the context of the family as a matter of interdependence with needs, activities, and characteristics of other family members.
Journal ArticleDOI

Occupational self-selection: a human capital approach to sex differences in occupational structure.

TL;DR: This article applied the hedonic price approach so as to embed occupational choice into the human capital framework, which can be used to obtain implications concerning the determinants of occupational structure, and thus alleviate some of the criticism of human capital model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Capitalism, Patriarchy, and Job Segregation by Sex

TL;DR: The development and importance of a sex-ordered division of labor is discussed in this paper, where it is argued that the roots of women's present social status lie in this hierarchy.