Day 1: Introduction—Diversity in Organizations
· Williams,
Katherine and Charles O’Reilly III (1998), “Demography and
Diversity in Organizations: A Review of 40 Years of Research,”
Research in Organizational Behavior 20: 77-140.
This review summarizes the big, big picture in diversity
management, and the overall conclusion is not too optimistic: the
downsides of diversity seem to overwhelm its positives. The other
articles in this class can be read as modifications to or arguments
against this summation.
· Ancona,
Deborah and David Caldwell (1992a), “Bridging the Boundary:
External Activity and Performance in Organizational Teams,”
Administrative Science Quarterly 37: 634-665.
With the article below, this piece summarizes research on task
teams in a high-technology firm, looking at how the mix of
functional specialties, as well as other demographic traits,
affected the group's final product.
·
________________________________ (1992b), “Demography and
Design: Predictors of New Product Team Performance,”
Organization Science 3: 321-341.
See above.
Day 2: The Positive Contributions of Diversity to
Organizations—Managing Minority Influence
· Nemeth,
Charlan (1986), “Differential Contribution of Majority and Minority
Influence,” Psychological Review 93: 23-32.
Classic study showing that incorporation of diversity and minority
viewpoints in groups makes for better-quality decisions compared to
conformist groups.
· Mullen,
Brian and Carolyn Copper (1994), “The Relation Between Group
Cohesiveness and Performance: An Integration,” Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology 115: 210-227.
This article shows that social cohesion and conformity are not
necessary to group performance; in fact, groups can tolerate a
great deal of diversity of people and opinions, as long as members
are all committed to the task. The study uses research from a wide
variety of organizations, ranging from corporations to the
military.
· Bray,
R.M., D. Johnson and J.T. Chilstrom Jr. (1982), “Social Influence
By Group Members with Minority Opinions: A Comparison of Hollander
and Moscovici,” Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology 43: 78-88.
This study compares the two dominant models of minority influence
in groups, and finds that they apply differently for men and women.
· Dentler,
R.A. and Erikson, Kai (1959), “The Functions of Deviance in
Groups,” Social Problems 7: 98-107.
Drawing on examples from Quaker work groups and army squads, the
authors show that groups actually need diversity and
minority opinions.
Day 3: Diversity, Decision-Making and Organizational
Performance
· Watson,
W., K. Kumar and L. Michaelson (1993), “Cultural Diversity’s Impact
on Interaction Process and Performance: Comparing Homogenous and
Diverse Task Groups,” Academy of Management Journal 36:
590-602.
In contrast to the conclusions of Williams and O'Reilly, this
article indicates that, given enough time, demographically diverse
groups can actually outperform homogenous ones.
· Jackson,
Susan, Karen May and Kristina Whitney (1995), “Understanding the
Dynamics of Diversity in Decision Making Teams,” in R. Guzzo and E.
Salas (Eds.), Team Effectiveness and Decision Making in
Organizations, San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
This review article looks generally at the diversity dynamic in
teams.
· Elsass,
Priscilla and Laura Graves (1997), “Demographic Diversity in
Decision-Making Groups: The Experiences of Women and People of
Color,” Academy of Management Review 22:
946-973.
This article links gender and race diversity in task groups to the
expectation status literature we read for the second class meeting.
Day 4: Managing Stereotypes in Diverse Workgroups
· Chapter 8
in Kanter, Rosabeth Moss (1977), Men and Women of the
Corporation, New York: Basic Books.
This case-study of the sales force in a major U.S. corporation
shows how women in male-dominated professions get slotted into
stereotyped roles: mother, seductress, pet, and iron maiden.
· Izraeli,
Dafna (1983), “Sex Effects or Structural Effects?: An Empirical
Test of Kanter’s Theory of Proportions,” Social Forces 62:
153-165.
Izraeli looks more closely at the hypotheses put forward by Kanter
concerning gender diversity in organizations; Izraeli argues that
these effects aren't symmetrical (i.e., they don't affect
men and women equally).
· Pugh,
M.D. and Ralph Wahrman (1983), “Neutralizing Sexism in Mixed-Sex
Groups: Do Women Have to Be Better Than Men?” American Journal
of Sociology 88: 746-762.
Like Izraeli, Pugh and Wahrman examine the asymmetry in men's
in women's experiences in task groups, this time in terms of
competency expectations.
· Megargee,
Edwin (1969), “Influence of Sex Roles on the Manifestation of
Leadership,” Journal of Applied Psychology,
53:377-382.
This article tests the relationship between gender roles and
leadership, with clear implications for organizations'
leadership composition.
Day 5: Diversity and the Origins of Demographic
Categories—Interaction and Social Identity
· Ridgeway,
Cecilia (1997), “Interaction and the Conservation of Gender
Inequality: Considering Employment,” American Sociological
Review 62: 218-235.
A theoretical piece on a subject that is usually treated from a
macro-structural point of view: gender discrimination in
employment. Ridgeway looks at the construction of gender at the
micro-interactional level. Both articles have implications for
diversity in organizations, as they indicate that context is more
significant in shaping behavior than individual traits.
· Wharton,
Amy (1992), “The Social Construction of Gender and Race in
Organizations: A Social Identity and Group Mobilization
Perspective,” in Pamela Tolbert and Samuel Bachrach (Eds.),
Research in the Sociology of Organizations, 10:
55-84.
This article looks at the micro-level processes that make gender
and race salient in diverse organizations.
· West,
Candace and Angela Garcia (1988), “Conversational Shift Work: A
Study of Topical Transitions Between Women and Men,” Social
Problems 35: 551-575.
This empirical study shows how status processes play out between
men and women in conversation.
Day 6: Diversity and the Origins of Demographic
Categories—Institutional and Cultural Factors
· Martin, Karin
(1998), “Becoming A Gendered Body: Practices of Preschools,”
American Sociological Review 63: 494-511.
This study of pre-schools examines how the power of the situation
affects the expression of masculine and feminine traits in
schoolchildren—consider how these same processes may affect adults
in other organizations.
· Brinton,
Mary (1988), “The Social-Institutional Bases of Gender
Stratification: Japan as an Illustrative Case,” American
Journal of Sociology 94: 300-334.
Empirical paper on the consequences of culture for human capital
development and organizational roles among women in Japan.
· Acker,
Joan (1990), “Hierarchies, Jobs, Bodies: A Theory of Gendered
Organizations,” Gender and Society 4: 139-158.
This article brilliantly points out that the social institution
known as a “job” is based on fundamentally gendered assumptions
that reproduce institutionalized inequality.
· Frank,
David John and Elizabeth McEneaney (1999), “The Individualization
of Society and the Liberalization of State Policies on Same-Sex
Sexual Relations, 1984-1995,” Social Forces 77:
911-944.
An empirical article on the state’s role in constructing normative
categories of sexuality.
Day 7: The Neglected Side of Gender
Diversity—Masculinities
·
Selections from Connell, R.W. (1995),
Masculinities, Berkeley: University of California
Press.
This book examines how masculinity is created in three
interactional realms: power, production and emotional relations.
·
Selections from Schwalbe, Michael (1996), Unlocking the
Iron Cage, New York: Oxford University Press.
This ethnography of the “men’s movement” offers a very unusual
glimpse at the social construction of masculinity in small groups.
· Williams,
Christine (1995), Still a Man’s World, Berkeley:
University of California Press.
This book is composed of case studies of men involved in four
predominantly-female occupations: nursing, elementary school
teaching, librarianship and social work. Williams shows how
masculinity is reproduced in the organizational setting.
Day 8: Gender and Labor Markets
• Reskin, Barbara (1991),
“Bringing the Men Back In: Sex Differentiation and the Devaluation
of Women’s Work,” in Judith Lorber and Susan Farrell (Eds.),
The Social Construction of Gender, Newbury Park, CA:
Sage.
Reskin argues that women are excluded from organizational power
because men make the rules that enable them to continue making the
rules.
• Bielby, William and James Baron
(1986), “Men and Women at Work: Sex Segregation and Statistical
Discrimination,” American Journal of Sociology 91:
759-799.
This is a structural explanation of gender differences in
employment and wage patterns, focusing on the exclusion of broad
classes of people from certain kinds of work—a practice known as
“statistical discrimination.”
• Selections from
Reskin, Barbara and Patricia Roos (1990), Job Queues, Gender
Queues, Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
This fascinating study of the gender composition of professions
argues from numerous case studies that we should think twice about
celebrating women’s entry into formerly male-dominated fields—in
fact, the authors claims, women only enter fields that men no
longer find desirable due to loss of prestige, pay and autonomy.
• Selections from
Jacobs, Jerry (1989), Revolving Doors: Sex Segregation and
Women’s Careers, Stanford, CA: Stanford University
Press.
Jacobs argues that neither socialization, nor human capital
investments, nor discrimination, but a combination of all three
produce sex segregation at work. It’s all about opportunity
structures: Jacobs shows that they different for men and women, and
that this produces different career outcomes.
Day 9: Diversity, Risk and Innovation
• Barber, Brad and Terrance Odean
(2001), “Boys Will Be Boys: Gender, Overconfidence, and Common
Stock Investment,” Quarterly Journal of Economics,
116:261-292.
This study by two finance scholars quantifies gender differences in
investing to show how men and women put their investment dollars in
different kinds of stocks.
• Barsky, Robert, Thomas Juster,
Miles Kimball, and Matthew Shapiro. 1997. “Preference Parameters
and Behavioral Heterogeneity: An Experimental Approach in the
Health and Retirement Study.” Quarterly Journal of
Economics, 112: 537-579.
This study takes virtually every form of diversity into
account—from gender, race and age to religion—in examining
attitudes toward risk and innovation.
• Jianakoplos, Nancy and Alexandra
Bernasek (1998), “Are Women More Risk-Averse?”, Economic
Inquiry 36: 620-630.
Another finance article that quantifies gender difference in
investing by showing that women invest less in stocks, and
consequently make less money in investing, compared to men.
Interestingly, these results are moderated by marital status,
suggesting once again that social roles—rather than innate
“difference”—drive variation in this arena.
• Ingrassia, Catherine (1995),
“The Pleasure of Business and the Business of Pleasure: Gender,
Credit, and the South Sea Bubble,” Studies in
Eighteenth-Century Culture 24: 191-210.
This fascinating article documents the role of gender in the first
great financial innovation in modern market history. The study
suggests that markets are an important arena for the social
construction of gender; they are both shaped by and reproduce the
gender identity of participants.
Day 10: Presentation of Student Projects (in preparation
for exam papers)
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