“…Since the 1980s in Australia, industry, government and the education sector have sought to increase number of women in male-dominated skilled trade occupations to no avail. A range of organisational practices and processes, including informal recruitment processes, gendered workplace policies and a lack of mentors, role models and female leadership, have been identified as key barriers to women’s employment in the skilled trades (Bridges et al, 2019, 2020; Fielden et al, 2000; Galea et al, 2020; MacIsaac and Domene, 2014; Smith, 2013; Wright, 2013, 2016). Furthermore, individualised mechanisms of exclusion and the concept of ‘borderwork’, which includes the use of gender stereotypes, sexual harassment, masculine culture, discrimination and violence, have also been flagged as significant barriers to women’s ongoing employment (Denissen, 2010a, 2010b; Denissen and Saguy, 2014; Fielden et al, 2000; Smith, 2013; Wagner, 2014; Wright, 2013, 2016).…”