Organizational Dynamics and Gender Equity The Case of Sociology Departments in the Pacific Region

1992 
This research attempts to clarify the organization's role in creating or reinforcing occupational stratification by explicitly examining how major organizational characteristics, including dynamic processes of expansion, contraction, and turnover, affect change over time in women's representation. The research focuses on academic sociology, a discipline that recently made modest gains in incorporating women faculty and graduate students. Drawing on longitudinal surveys of sociology departments in the western United States, the study examines the extent and direction of 5-year changes in the sociology faculty sex composition and the degree to which men and women faculty are concentrated at different academic ranks. These changes at the departmental level in women's representation and position are analyzed as outcomes that vary depending on characteristics of the political economy of the department and of the institution as a whole. The model explains a substantial portion of the variance among departments ...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    32
    References
    17
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []