Gender, Space and City Bankers

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A01=Helen Longlands
Author_Helen Longlands
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city bankers
Connell 2005a
Education System
Elite Banking
elite banks
Elite Finance
Elite Workers
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family spaces
fatherhood
finance industry
financial masculinities
gender
gender equality policies
gender relations
gendered hegemony
global city
global finance
Global Hegemonic Masculinities
globalisation
Hegemonic Masculinity
Helen Longlands
institutional social practices
Local Hegemonic Masculinities
Local State School
London bankers
management
masculinity
Matt's Reference
Matt’s Reference
neoliberal capitalism
neoliberalism
Online Promotional Material
post financial crisis London banking
Primary School Choices
qualitative social research
School Choice
social class
Socio-economic Class
space
Transnational Business Masculinity
transnational elites
UK Bank
UK Education System
UK Financial Service
urban inequality studies
Vice Versa
women's agency
work family balance

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367785055
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Gendered processes of globalisation, transnationalisation and urbanisation are increasing local and global inequalities and widening the gap between the rich and the poor. The global finance industry plays a key role in these processes, directing its operations from local command points in global cities such as London. Drawing on empirical data collected after the 2008 financial crisis – in depth interviews with male City of London bankers who are also fathers, in depth interviews with the bankers’ wives, observational data of work and family spaces, and banks’ promotional online material –this book explores the day-to-day individual and institutional social practices of wealthy City bankers and banks. The book’s analysis offers insight into how the spaces of work and home are integrally linked in ways that mutually shape, support and sustain the gendered dominance of the industry and its highly paid workers.

This book will appeal to postgraduate students, researchers and academics interested in the fields of gender studies, critical studies of men and masculinities, urban and metropolitan studies, sociology, studies of globalisation and transnationalisation, anthropology, cultural studies and business management. It will also be interesting for those concerned about the role of the finance industry and neoliberal capitalist ideologies, values and practices in ever-widening local and global inequalities.

Dr Helen Longlands is a lecturer in Education and International Development at UCL Institute of Education, University College London. Her research interests are interdisciplinary and centre on issues relating to gender, inequalities and social justice, particularly men, masculinities and transnational relationships and structures of power.

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