Gender and the Professions

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Feminism
Gender Role Stereotyping Beliefs
Gender Studies
Gender Wage Gap
gendered career advancement barriers
Geraldine Healy
Glenda Strachan
GPG
Inequality Regimes
Intersecting Identity Categories
intersectionality in organizations
Irene Ryan
Janis Bailey
Judith K. Pringle
labor market discrimination
Large Law Firms
Linda Colley
Male Nurses
Mixed Agencies
Moira Calveley
occupational gender segregation
Organizational Studies
Pavithra Kailasapathy
professional identity formation
Professions
QPS
Recent UK Study
Robyn May
Skilled Migrant Women
Spanish Higher Education Institutions
Stefanie Ruel
Stem Career
Stem Employment
Stem Job
Stem Occupation
Stem Training
Steven Shelley
Susan Durbin
Susan Ressia
UK Aviation
UK Labour Market
Uraiporn Kattiyapornpong
Valerie Caven
Women Architects
women in STEM careers
workplace equality policy
Younger Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138680579
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Aug 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book examines gender and professions in the 21st century. Historically the professions encompassed law, medicine and the church, all of which excluded women from participation. Industry and the 20th century introduced new professions such as engineering and latterly information technology skill and, whilst the increase in credentialism and accreditations open up further avenues for professions to develop, many of the ‘newer’ professions exhibit similar gendered characteristics, still based on a perceived masculine identity of the professional workers and the association of the professional with high level credentials based on university qualifications. In contrast, professions such as teaching and nursing, characterized as women’s professions which reflected women’s socially acceptable role of caring, developed as regulated occupations from the late 19th century.

Since the 1970s and the women’s movements, anti-discrimination and equal opportunity legislation and policies have aimed to break down the gendered bastion of the professions and grant women entry. With growing numbers of women employed in a range of professions and the political importance of gender equality gaining prominence globally, Gender and the Professions also considers how women and men are faring in a diverse range of professional occupations.

Aimed at researchers, academics and policy makers in the fields of Professions, Gender Studies, Organizational Studies and related disciplines. Gender and the Professions provides new insights of women’s experiences in the professions in both developed and less developed countries and in professions less often explored.

Kaye Broadbent is Honorary Associate in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences,University of Technology Sydney, Australia.

Glenda Strachan is Professor Emerita in the Department of Employment Relations and Human Resources at Griffith University, Australia.

Geraldine Healy is Professor of Employment Relations and Director of the Centre for Research in Equality and Diversity at Queen Mary University of London, UK.