Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Glass ceiling

Encyclopedia : G : GL : GLA : Glass ceiling


The term glass ceiling (officially known as 'vertical segregation') refers to the observation that top-level management in businesses consist predominantly, if not exclusively, of a certain demographic (e.g., white heterosexual men). A "ceiling" is suggested because persons outside the dominant demographic group are supposedly limited in how far they are able to advance inside the organization ranks; the ceiling is "glass" (transparent) because the limitation is not immediately apparent. The "glass ceiling" is distinguished from formal barriers to advancement, such as education or experience requirements. The existence of the glass ceiling is frequently cited as a failure of existing anti-discrimination action.

The term is often credited as having been originally coined by Carol Hymowitz and Timothy Schellhardt in the March 24 1986 edition of the Wall Street Journal. However, the term was used prior to that e.g. in a March 1984 Adweek article by Gay Bryant.

The term glass elevator is sometimes used to describe the rapid promotion of men over women, especially into management, in female-dominated fields like nursing

The term glass cliff describes a situation wherein someone, particularly a woman, has been promoted into a risky, difficult job where the chances of failure are higher.

There is also a sometimes-used term glass floor which describes the theory that some factor both limits a group's (often women's) progress but also limits their numbers in situations like, say, imprisonment and the disproportionate numbers of male inmates. Biological factors are often quoted for these, although contentious.

The phrase glass floor is also sometimes used to describe the fact that men almost always occupy the least pleasant jobs in a society - sewage workers, miners, street cleaners, refuse workers etc.

The political aspects of these concepts limit the ability of research to clarify the issue.

Worldwide statistics

Female share of seats in elected national chambers in November 2004 (percent)
Sweden 45.3
Denmark 37.0
Finland 37.5
Norway 36.4
Netherlands 35.0
Germany 32.8
Iceland 30.2
New Zealand 28.3
Austria 27.5
Canada 21.1
China 20.2
UK(Commons) 17.8
United States 15.0
Japan 7.1
The following is a sampling of statistics related to the relative status of women worldwide which seem to support the glass ceiling theory.

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: