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Journal ArticleDOI

Normative Discrimination and the Motherhood Penalty

Stephen Benard, +1 more
- 22 Sep 2010 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 5, pp 289-300
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TLDR
The authors examined whether mothers face discrimination in labor-market-type evaluations even when they provide indisputable evidence that they are competent and committed to paid work and found that evaluators discriminate against highly successful mothers by viewing them as less warm, less likable, and more interpersonally hostile than otherwise similar workers who are not mothers.
Abstract
This research proposes and tests a new theoretical mechanism to account for a portion of the motherhood penalty in wages and related labor market outcomes. At least a portion of this penalty is attributable to discrimination based on the assumption that mothers are less competent and committed than other types of workers. But what happens when mothers definitively prove their competence and commitment? In this study, we examine whether mothers face discrimination in labor-market-type evaluations even when they provide indisputable evidence that they are competent and committed to paid work. We test the hypothesis that evaluators discriminate against highly successful mothers by viewing them as less warm, less likable, and more interpersonally hostile than otherwise similar workers who are not mothers. The results support this “normative discrimination” hypothesis for female but not male evaluators. The findings have important implications for understanding the nature and persistence of discrimination towa...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mothers of Invention? Gender, Motherhood, and New Dimensions of Productivity in the Science Profession

TL;DR: For example, this paper found that academic mothers suffer a motherhood penalty not experienced by childless women or mothers in industry, and that there is a gender gap in the number of mothers in academic and non-professionally employed women.
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Sexual Orientation in the Labor Market

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The Pursuit of Prestige: The Experience of Institutional Striving from a Faculty Perspective

TL;DR: For example, Bloomgarden et al. as mentioned in this paper examined faculty experience of institutional striving with attention to how faculty perceive the origins of striving, and its influence on institutional identity and direction, their own work-lives and reward systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stability and transformation in gender, work, and family: insights from the second shift for the next quarter century

TL;DR: The second shift: Working families and the revolution at home argued that the revolution toward gender equality in the USA has been stalled due to three factors: (1) women continue to do most of the unpaid work of childcare and housework; (2) insufficient flexibility in the workplace for accommodating family caregiving needs; and (3) a deficit of public sector benefits, such as paid parental leave as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Book

Men and Women of the Corporation

TL;DR: Men and Women of the Corporation: The Population, Industrial Supply Corporation: Setting Roles And Images as discussed by the authors, Men and women of the corporation: The population, the setting roles and images, the players and the stage.
Book

Regression Models for Categorical and Limited Dependent Variables

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose Continuous Outcomes Binary Outcomes Testing and Fit Ordinal Outcomes Numeric Outcomes and Numeric Numeric Count Outcomes (NOCO).
Journal ArticleDOI

HIERARCHIES, JOBS, BODIES: A Theory of Gendered Organizations

TL;DR: The authors argues that organizational structure is not gender neutral; on the contrary, assumptions about gender underlie the documents and contracts used to construct organizations and to provide the commonsense ground for theorizing about them.
Journal ArticleDOI

A model of (often mixed) stereotype content: Competence and warmth respectively follow from perceived status and competition.

TL;DR: Contrary to antipathy models, 2 dimensions mattered, and many stereotypes were mixed, either pitying (low competence, high warmth subordinates) or envying (high competence, low warmth competitors).
Journal ArticleDOI

Regression Models for Categorical and Limited Dependent Variables

James A. Calvin
- 01 Feb 1998 - 
TL;DR: Introduction Continuous Outcomes Binary Outcomes Testing and Fit Ordinal Outcomes Nominal outcomes Limited Outcomes Count Outcomes Conclusions
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