“…Resistance to women firefighters in the traditional FRS was focused on precisely these grounds, as they were counterposed to men as physically weaker, less valuable, but also sexually available; a characterization that fed into an understanding that more women in the organisation would disrupt its culture, safety standards and service quality. The Fire Brigades' Union (FBU), has been described as militant (Baigent 2001, 95) Research focusing on the extent to which women's management skills are recognised within male-dominated occupational contexts suggests that gender remains a determining factor, however (Cames, Vinnicombe and Singh 2001;Schein et al 1998;Watts 2009). Management skills including intuition, flair, resilience, commitment, authority, experience, leadership, strategic thinking, interpersonal and communication skill, as with intangible skills more generally, are less easily and often overtly codified and demonstrable.…”