Does network recruitment contribute to the glass ceiling? We use administrative data from two companies to answer the question. In the presence of gender homophily, recruitment through employee referrals can disadvantage women when an old boys’ network is in place. We calculate the segregating effects of network recruitment across multiple job levels in the two firms. If network recruitment is a factor, the segregating impact should disadvantage women more at higher levels. We find this pattern, but also find that network recruitment is a desegregating force overall. It promotes women’s representation strongly at all levels, but less so at higher levels. This article shows how administrative data can be used to tackle the complex problem of...
This article revives the debate over whether women’s upward mo-bility prospects decline as they clim...
Substantial research has documented challenges women experience building and benefiting from network...
This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual ne...
Does network recruitment contribute to the glass ceiling? We use administrative data from two compan...
Neugart M, Zaharieva A. Social Networks, Promotions, and the Glass-Ceiling Effect. Center for Mathem...
Current scholarship commonly posits that network recruitment contributes to job sex segregation and ...
We investigate the impact of professional networks on men's and women's earnings, using a dataset of...
Structural inequalities between men and women persist in academia. The "glass ceiling effect" is one...
We use a field experiment to show referral-based hiring has the potential to dis-advantage qualified...
This paper examines the gender composition of the flow of new hirees along the organizational hierar...
This paper uses a field experiment in Malawi to show that highly skilled women are systematically di...
[[abstract]]It has been a long time, since women entered the workplace. However, this doesn?t mean t...
This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual ne...
The glass ceiling effect has been defined in a recent US Federal Commission report as “the unseen, y...
In recent years, there has been increasing concern that gender bias has prevented women from advanci...
This article revives the debate over whether women’s upward mo-bility prospects decline as they clim...
Substantial research has documented challenges women experience building and benefiting from network...
This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual ne...
Does network recruitment contribute to the glass ceiling? We use administrative data from two compan...
Neugart M, Zaharieva A. Social Networks, Promotions, and the Glass-Ceiling Effect. Center for Mathem...
Current scholarship commonly posits that network recruitment contributes to job sex segregation and ...
We investigate the impact of professional networks on men's and women's earnings, using a dataset of...
Structural inequalities between men and women persist in academia. The "glass ceiling effect" is one...
We use a field experiment to show referral-based hiring has the potential to dis-advantage qualified...
This paper examines the gender composition of the flow of new hirees along the organizational hierar...
This paper uses a field experiment in Malawi to show that highly skilled women are systematically di...
[[abstract]]It has been a long time, since women entered the workplace. However, this doesn?t mean t...
This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual ne...
The glass ceiling effect has been defined in a recent US Federal Commission report as “the unseen, y...
In recent years, there has been increasing concern that gender bias has prevented women from advanci...
This article revives the debate over whether women’s upward mo-bility prospects decline as they clim...
Substantial research has documented challenges women experience building and benefiting from network...
This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual ne...