To contribute to the understanding of gender inequalities within the workplace, this article explored gender differences in claims-making for career advancement and how they depend on workplace contexts based on unique German linked employer–employee data. Applying organizational fixed-effects models, we found that women were less likely than men to make claims, especially when they had children, and that this was related to their working fewer hours. The gender gap in claims-making further depended on workplace characteristics that influenced women’s ability and their feeling of deservingness to work in more demanding positions. Although claims by mothers’ increased in work–life supportive workplaces, highly demanding workplace cultures seemed to hinder women’s attempts to negotiate for career advancement. Thus, the dominance of the ideal worker norm was a relevant driver for the gender gap in claims-making. Whereas this gap in making claims was found to be only partially related to the workplace gender structure, the formalization of human resource practices, such as performance-based evaluations in the workplace, fostered mothers’ claims-making, indicating that these evaluations were used to legitimize their claims in the workplace.
Trotz bisweilen dramatisierender Berichterstattung verläuft die Armutsquote in Deutschland zwischen 2008 und 2013 weitgehend konstant. Die minimalen Schwankungen, die einige Analysen anzeigen, sind nach statistischen und wissenschaftlichen Kriterien kaum belastbar. Sie beruhen zudem auf dem umstrittenen Standardindikator zur Messung von Armut. Sie halten einer Überprüfung auf Grundlage alternativer Messarten nicht stand.
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