Substantial research has documented challenges women experience building and benefiting from networks to achieve career success. Yet fundamental questions remain regarding which aspects of men’s and women’s networks differ and how differences impact their careers. To spur future research to address these questions, we present an integrative framework to clarify how and why gender and networks—in concert—may explain career inequality. We delineate two distinct, complementary explanations: (1) unequal network characteristics (UNC) asserts that men and women have different network characteristics, which account for differences in career success; (2) unequal network returns (UNR) asserts that even when men and women have the same network charac...
This study examines how women’s and men’s career referents, the people they see as having similar ca...
While organizations have significantly reduced the overt and intentional forms of sex discrimination...
In recent literature a relevant problem has been the relationship between career/personal contact ne...
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...
This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual ne...
This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual ne...
The present study analyzed (a) gender differences in the gender composition (i.e., the proportion of...
Organizational research provides evidence that men and women differ in the structure of their person...
Women generally have less job authority than men. Previous research has shown that human capital, fa...
We investigate the impact of professional networks on men's and women's earnings, using a dataset of...
Drawing upon Cabrera and Thomas-Hunt's (2006) theoretical framework for the advancement of executive...
Although network analysis has proven a useful approach to the study of organizations and organizatio...
Organizational research provides evidence that men and women differ in the structure of their person...
Studies have shown that women’s professional networks are often less powerful and effective than m...
This study examines how women’s and men’s career referents, the people they see as having similar ca...
While organizations have significantly reduced the overt and intentional forms of sex discrimination...
In recent literature a relevant problem has been the relationship between career/personal contact ne...
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...
This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual ne...
This paper examines how gender proportions at the workplace affect the extent to which individual ne...
The present study analyzed (a) gender differences in the gender composition (i.e., the proportion of...
Organizational research provides evidence that men and women differ in the structure of their person...
Women generally have less job authority than men. Previous research has shown that human capital, fa...
We investigate the impact of professional networks on men's and women's earnings, using a dataset of...
Drawing upon Cabrera and Thomas-Hunt's (2006) theoretical framework for the advancement of executive...
Although network analysis has proven a useful approach to the study of organizations and organizatio...
Organizational research provides evidence that men and women differ in the structure of their person...
Studies have shown that women’s professional networks are often less powerful and effective than m...
This study examines how women’s and men’s career referents, the people they see as having similar ca...
While organizations have significantly reduced the overt and intentional forms of sex discrimination...
In recent literature a relevant problem has been the relationship between career/personal contact ne...