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Work and Occupations
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Mechanisms of Organizational Sex Segregation

Organizational Characteristics and the Sex of Newly Recruited Employees

Magnus Bygren

Johanna Kumlin

Stockholm University

This study examines the process underlying sex segregation at the organizational level by focusing on the process through which organizations renew their workforce. The authors used a sample of 1,460 Swedish workplaces that recruited 75,261 employees during the period 1991 to 1995. The results indicate that the most important factor in reproducing segregation at the organizational level is sex segregation in the occupations from which organizations recruit their personnel. Organizations’ sex composition is to a very high degree determined by the sex composition of the occupations they employ. In addition, large organizations and expanding organizations tend to make more sex-atypical recruitments compared with other organizations.

Key Words: organizational demography • workplaces • segregation

Work and Occupations, Vol. 32, No. 1, 39-65 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/0730888404265771


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