Stereotypes an ‘obstacle to gender balance’ at work
October 20th, 2010 - 4:13 pm ICT by ANIMelbourne, Oct 20 (ANI): A new report has found that Australian beliefs about the role of women are barriers for female employees seeking to gain leadership positions in business.
Commissioned by the Financial Services Institute of Australasia (Finsia), the paper has suggested that initiatives such as mentoring programs, forums and research will have limited effect until such beliefs are addressed.
Titled: ‘Seven Myths about Women and Work’, and highlights excuses justifying the small number of women in leadership positions in Australian business.
The reasons include a lack of women, female childcare responsibilities, women lacking ambition, unnecessary targets set for women on boards, women being unable to negotiate, meritocracy in the workplace and exaggerations about the gender pay gap.
The research comes just weeks after the Equal Opportunity for Women in the Workplace (EOWA) census of women in leadership showed that just 8.4 per cent of directors of ASX200 companies were female.
Moreover, there were only six female chief executives and five women chairs.
“We felt that in order to address these complex and often unconscious barriers it is necessary to acknowledge, define and analyse the most potent beliefs and challenge their legitimacy,” News.com.au quoted Martin Fahy of Finsia, as saying.
Other strategies include greater public expenditure on childcare, research about gender bias in certain roles and departments and strengthening support for staff transitioning back into the workplace after maternity/paternity leave.
Fahy said there is no shortage of capable businesswomen in Australia, but assumptions are made about their commitment in the long term, making them less likely to be chosen for opportunities.
“At the same time, women are often deemed to be unsuitable for leadership roles because their careers fail to match the traditional templates or idea of success based on male breadwinner norms,” he said.
“What’s required is a radical change in norms and behaviours within our workplaces, to close the gap between policy, practice and attitudes,” he added. (ANI)
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Tags: australasia, australian business, businesswomen, chief executives, fahy, finsia, five women, gap, gender bias, leadership positions, leadership roles, legitimacy, mentoring programs, norms, public expenditure, role of women, stereotypes, time women, women and work, women in the workplace