2009
DOI: 10.1177/0950017009337074
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Leaders of men: women ‘managing’ in construction

Abstract: A B S TR AC TAlthough women's experience of working in management has been studied extensively, the particular challenges they face in this role within male-dominated professions merits further attention. This article draws on research into the career experiences of women civil engineers in the UK to critically discuss the possibilities for women to pursue a management pathway within construction. A feminist theoretical framework has been used to analyse data from 31 in-depth interviews with women working in b… Show more

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Cited by 80 publications
(108 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…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.…”
Section: The Traditional Fire and Rescue Service And The Dominance Ofmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…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.…”
Section: The Traditional Fire and Rescue Service And The Dominance Ofmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The underlying idea is that recruiters have 'gendered' expectations concerning the performance, ability or 'fit' of job candidates. For leadership positions (as the ones analysed below), such expectations are often to the disadvantage of women, thereby creating a preference for male candidates (Heilman, 1995;Watts, 2009). Even though MPs have overcome an important selection barrier by getting elected, such stereotypes might still impede the further (post-election) development of female MPs (McKay, 2004).…”
Section: Why Women May Differ: Gender Stereotypes Multi-income Housementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kong [8], as well as the demographic data evident in Watts [30] study on women managers in the UK construction industry and that by [31] examining workers' alcohol use in male-dominated industries in Australia, which all underscore that the construction industry is male dominated. However, [21] study reflects contrasting demographics findings as it states that the construction industry in India is female dominated with women constituting 51% of the construction workers.…”
Section: Participant's Socio-demographic Characteristicsmentioning
confidence: 99%