Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

The Dynamics of Women's Network Relationships


Affiliations
1 Deakin University, Australia
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


The lack of women in leadership positions remains a persistent social phenomenon. The aim of the paper is to investigate how networking is connected to leadership aspirations and examine women's understanding and practice of networking as a career developmental skill. Theoretical explanations around women's lack of leadership has focused on women's organisational constraints, their outsider status and the conditions of women within the broader community; however, what is mostly absent from research is how women's relationships with each other influence opportunities for leadership. Women often experience the 'glass ceiling' at the mid-career level, therefore the research focussed on networking at the mid-career level in order to better understand how women draw on networking to help achieve their career goals. This paper responds to the persistent challenges that women face in networking by examining how networks are created, understood, and enacted by women. This paper reports on recent research that investigated how a select group of mid-career women understood and practiced networking. The paper discusses survey and interview data to analyse how women's way of networking may influence career aspirations and identifies ways that women can strengthen their networking in order to build capacity and mobility for leadership.

Keywords

Leadership, Women, Networks.
Subscription Login to verify subscription
User
Notifications
Font Size


  • Australian Vice-Chancellors' Committee (AVCC). 2006. The Second AVCC Action Plan for Women Employed in Australian Universities 2006 - 2010. Canberra:AVCC.
  • Browne-Quinn. C. 2011. Golden Skirts - Female Board Members Get Recycled, 13th May 2011 http://christinebrown-quinn.com/the-female-capitalist/2011/05/13/golden-skirts-femaleboard-members-get-recycled/. (accessed 31 May, 2011).
  • Crabtree. J. 2011. One woman, multiple boards: rise of the 'super-connected' director. Financial Times, May 10, 2011.
  • Durbin. S. 2011. Creating Knowledge through Networks: a Gender Perspective. Gender, Work and Organization. 18(1): 90-112.
  • Fombrun, C. J. 1982. Strategies for Network Research in Organizations. Academy of Management Review. 7 (2):280-291.
  • Ibarra. H. and Andrews. S., B. 1993. Power, Social Influence, and Sense Making: Effects of Network Centrality and Proximity on Employee Perceptions. Administrative Science Quarterly. 38 (2):277-303.
  • Littlejohn, S. 2000. Theories of Human Communication. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
  • Melkers, J. and E. Welch. 2009. The Structure of Collaborative and Career Development Social Networks of Women and Men in Academic Science. Prepared for the Atlanta S&T Conference, October 2009.
  • Ponti, M. 2011. Uncovering Causality in Narratives of Collaboration: Actor-Network Theory and Event Structure Analysis. Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung/Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 13(1): Art. 11.
  • Reagans. R. and Zuckerman, E.,W. 2001. Networks, Diversity, and Productivity: The Social Capital of Corporate R&D Teams. Organization Science. 12 (4): 502-517.
  • Rhode, D. L. (Ed.). 2003. The difference "difference" makes. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Sabattini. L. 2008. Unwritten Rules: What You Don't Know Can Hurt Your Career. Catalyst Research Reports. June 2008 http://www.catalyst.org/publication/264/unwritten-ruleswhat-you-dont-know-can-hurt-your-career. (accessed May 24, 2012).
  • Sabattini. L. 2011. Unwritten Rules: Why Doing a Good Job Might Not Be Enough Europe Catalyst Research Reports. January 2011. http://www.catalyst.org/publication/455/unwritten-rules-why-doing-a-good-job-might-not-be-enough-europe (accessed May 25, 2012).
  • Seufert, A., Krogh, G. von and Back, A. 1999. Towards knowledge networking. Journal of Knowledge Management. 3 (3):180-190.
  • Schwandt, T. A. 1994. Constructivist, interpretivist approaches to human inquiry. In N. K. Denzin & Y. S. Lincoln (Eds.), Handbook of qualitative research. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
  • Vinnicombe, S. and Colwill, N. 1995. The Essence of Women in Management. London: Prentice Hall.
  • Vongalis-Macrow, A. 2012. It's about the leadership: The importance of women leaders doing leadership for women. NASPA Journal About Women in Higher Education. (forthcoming).
  • Vongalis-Macrow, 2012. The dynamics of women's relationships: The Good, Bad and Reality. Paper presented at the Twelfth International Conference on Knowledge, Culture and Change Management. University Center, Chicago, USA from 6-8 July 2012.

Abstract Views: 163

PDF Views: 0




  • The Dynamics of Women's Network Relationships

Abstract Views: 163  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Athena Vongalis-Macrow
Deakin University, Australia

Abstract


The lack of women in leadership positions remains a persistent social phenomenon. The aim of the paper is to investigate how networking is connected to leadership aspirations and examine women's understanding and practice of networking as a career developmental skill. Theoretical explanations around women's lack of leadership has focused on women's organisational constraints, their outsider status and the conditions of women within the broader community; however, what is mostly absent from research is how women's relationships with each other influence opportunities for leadership. Women often experience the 'glass ceiling' at the mid-career level, therefore the research focussed on networking at the mid-career level in order to better understand how women draw on networking to help achieve their career goals. This paper responds to the persistent challenges that women face in networking by examining how networks are created, understood, and enacted by women. This paper reports on recent research that investigated how a select group of mid-career women understood and practiced networking. The paper discusses survey and interview data to analyse how women's way of networking may influence career aspirations and identifies ways that women can strengthen their networking in order to build capacity and mobility for leadership.

Keywords


Leadership, Women, Networks.

References