Beyond boardrooms: The impact of corporate quota on gender equality in organizations
Corporate boardroom quotas ensure a more equal representation of women in leadership. How do they impact inequality in earnings and job careers beyond the boardroom? Assistant professor and sociologist Zoltán Lippényi received a VIDI grant to establish his own research group on this topic.
At this point it is unknown to what extent and in what ways quotas are successful in achieving broader equality aims. Beyond Boardrooms will be the first research project to address in what ways quota schemes impact gender equality. Zoltán Lippényi: 'With my VIDI project, I aim to deliver a significant contribution to the developing research field on corporate quota regulations and to our understanding of the organizational generation of inequality. It will be a major leap forward in understanding the broader, societal impact of quota regulations.'
His research will investigate how quotas impact women’s access to corporate leadership positions and HR policies and practices, to what degree the impacts trickle down to earnings inequality between men and women and occupational sex segregation, and to what degree they spill over across organizations, by examining a previously unresearched context, the Netherlands.
Women in leadership positions
Women in large European companies occupy less than 30% of corporate leadership positions and the pace of advancement of gender diversity in leadership is decelerating. European governments have experimented with corporate boardroom quotas to ensure a more equal representation of women in leadership positions, hoping that this representation would trickle down to affect women’s career opportunities at lower organizational ranks and spill over to organizations not directly targeted by these policies.
New data infrastructure
The study will consider the impact of two quota regulations, the corporate diversity target (2013-2020) and corporate quota (2022-2024). Lippényi will construct the Netherlands Integrated Database of Inequality in Organizations (NIDIO), a unique infrastructure that combines (1) administrative register and survey data about the earnings, occupation, and employment histories of Dutch organizational leaders and employees, and (2) business registers and diversity monitor surveys about organizational HR practices and policies. This data will be used by the Beyond Boardrooms project to provide important insight into the impacts of past and ongoing regulatory efforts as well as guidance for improving quota regulations and corporate strategies to further gender equality.
More information
Zoltán Lippényi, PhD
Assistant Professor in Sociology
University of Groningen
z.lippenyi@rug.nl
+31 50 36 32681
Laatst gewijzigd: | 07 september 2022 13:40 |
Meer nieuws
-
05 november 2024
Hebben ouders invloed op de roze of grijze bril van hun kinderen?
Hoe ontstaat een positieve blik eigenlijk? In hoeverre is opvoeding hierbij van belang? En welke rol speelt optimisme eigenlijk in het dagelijks leven van ouders en kinderen? Charlotte Vrijen probeert een antwoord te vinden op deze vragen. Ze doet...
-
10 september 2024
Steeds weer de verkeerde
Julie Karsten onderzoekt hoe ervaringen met seksueel grensoverschrijdend gedrag de online partnerkeuze van jongeren beïnvloeden. Ze richt zich vooral op de vraag of mensen die eerder ‘dader’ of ‘slachtoffer’ zijn geweest elkaar opzoeken. Door deze...
-
09 september 2024
Mensen met psychose vaak slachtoffer van geweld
Mensen met een psychose worden veel vaker slachtoffer van geweld en criminaliteit dan de algemene bevolking. Dit blijkt uit het promotieonderzoek van Bertine de Vries, dat zij op 19 september verdedigt aan de Rijksuniversiteit Groningen.