Resum
The expatriate population is still dominantly male - 75% of assignees in 2017 were men. Researchers have concluded that the continuing
underrepresentation of women in expatriate positions can partly be explained by informal hiring processes that allow selection decisions to be
influenced by negative stereotypes that the largely male decision makers hold against female candidates. In this study, we challenge this line of
argument and investigated two of its underlying assumptions: First, that it is female candidate gender that causes a lower likelihood to be hired
as an international assignee, and second, that it is male evaluators who are less likely to hire female candidates for expatriate assignments. Using
Experimental Vignette Methodology, 214 participants of business school and university courses were presented with two vignettes in a 2
(candidate gender) X 2 (assignment type) mixed factorial design. Results confirmed that female candidates were less likely to be hired for
expatriate assignments. However, it was female evaluators who were favoring male over female candidates, while male evaluators did not
show any gender bias. We discuss our findings in light of research on expatriate selection and gender biases, and derive theoretical and practical
implications.
Idioma original | Anglès |
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Estat de la publicació | Publicada - 13 de juny 2018 |
Esdeveniment | 15th International Human Resource Management Conference, Madrid 2018 - Durada: 13 de juny 2018 → 15 de juny 2018 |
Conferència
Conferència | 15th International Human Resource Management Conference, Madrid 2018 |
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Període | 13/06/18 → 15/06/18 |