2001
DOI: 10.1006/bare.2001.0161
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Explaining Gender Inequity in the New Zealand Accounting Profession

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Cited by 65 publications
(94 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(66 reference statements)
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“…Similarly, within the accounting profession the historical operation of patriarchal and ingrained gender discrimination that discourages women from entering the workforce is well documented (see for example Kirkham 1992, Lehman 1992, Whiting and Wright 2001. Bourdieu (2001) identifies the central reason for patriarchal success as its ability to naturalise gender distinctions, where differing sexual and biological functions are used to justify different positions or identities and dictate different behaviours and roles that subsequently translate into wider social differences.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, within the accounting profession the historical operation of patriarchal and ingrained gender discrimination that discourages women from entering the workforce is well documented (see for example Kirkham 1992, Lehman 1992, Whiting and Wright 2001. Bourdieu (2001) identifies the central reason for patriarchal success as its ability to naturalise gender distinctions, where differing sexual and biological functions are used to justify different positions or identities and dictate different behaviours and roles that subsequently translate into wider social differences.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research carried out by Friedman & Greenhaus (2000) and Mesu et al (2013) showed that women who consider the family and work are important, is more likely to be in the managerial level positions. Although women have the same type of education as their male colleagues, they remain to be in low level type of jobs and have to fulfill the responsibility at home as a wife and mother (Whiting & Wright, 2001;Risman & Johnson-Sumerford, 1998;Cooper, Lewis, Smithson & Dyer, 2001;Kelly 1997;Blair-Loy, 2003). This article will discuss the strategies to sustain the dual earner in the workplace.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Walker (2008) provides a review of the extent to which accountancy historians have engaged with women's issues and reviews some important papers that examine the historical role of gender in the accountancy profession (Kirkham, 1992;Lehman, 1992;Kirkham and Loft, 1993;Wootton and Kemmerer, 2000) and the potential influence of feminist theory on accountancy. Another line of research documents women's participation and experiences in the profession and suggests that women face continuing gender discrimination (Haynes, 2008b;Kirkham, 1997;Whiting and Wright, 2001) and that motherhood and child-rearing present serious obstacles to women's promotion prospects (Barker and Monks, 1998;Gallhofer and McNicholas, 1998;Dambrin and Lambert, 2008). This line of research also suggests that the practices in audit firms reproduce gender ARTICLE PALGRAVE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1057DOI: 10.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%