Gender regimes: Difference between revisions

From Glossary LIVES
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Widmere (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
According to the seminal paper of Cornell (2006), gender regimes are defined as overall patterns of gender relations within an organization. This continuing pattern provides the context for particular events, relationships and individual practices. A local gender regime may reproduce, but in specific ways may also depart from, the wider gender order (i.e. the whole societal pattern of gender relations). A gender regime involves all the dimensions of gender relationships. According to Connel (2006), four dimensions should be distinguished:
Glossaire LIVES Gender Regimes
According to the seminal work of Raewyn Connell (1987), a ‘gender regime’ refers to several  distinct but interrelated dimensions of gender relations in a given sociohistorical context. It provides the normative context for particular events, aspirations, relationships and practices to unfold. According to Connell (2006), a ‘gender regime’ is composed of:
1) The sexual division of labour: the way in which production and consumption are arranged along gender lines, including the gendering of occupations and the spatial and symbolic division between paid work, caring and domestic labour, and the distribution of economic rewards and resources.
2) The distribution of power: the way in which control, authority and force are exercised along gender lines, including organizational hierarchies, access to political power, and collective and individual forms of violence.  
3) Interpersonal interactions and emotions: the way in which attachment and antagonism between people and groups are organized along gender lines, including feelings of solidarity, prejudice and disdain, sexual attraction and repulsion.
4) Cultural and symbolic representations: the way in which gender identities are defined in culture, the language and symbols of gender difference, and the prevailing beliefs and attitudes about gender.
Such gender regimes play out simultaneously at the macro, meso and micro-levels of society; each level relating to specific social processes: the historical construction of women's and men's relationship to the labour market and to the family in various societal contexts (the macro-level ‘gender order’ or ‘gender contract’, see Crompton & Le Feuvre 1996; Le Feuvre, 2010); the institutionalisation of the different dimensions of the ‘gender regime’ in specific organisational / occupational settings (the meso-level ‘gender arrangement’ or ‘gender script’, see Boni-Le Goff & Le Feuvre, 2017; Boni-Le Goff et al., 2019) and the daily management of normative environments by individuals (the micro-level ‘gender practices’ or the corporeal manifestation of ‘gender identities’, see Zinn & Le Feuvre, 2013).  
However, Connell and those who have been inspired by her work are sensitive to the potential tensions, or even contradictions, that can exist between the historically constructed societal pattern of gender relations (e.g. the ‘male breadwinner / female carer’ model of the sexual division of labour than has been enshrined in many social protection policies) at the meso-level, and the more localised configurations, that may conform to or depart from the wider gender order. Using the notion of ‘gender regime’ implies paying as much analytical attention to inconsistencies and to the forces for social change as to structural constraints and the mechanisms of social reproduction.


1) Gender division of labor: the way in which production and consumption are arranged along gender lines, including the gendering of occupations and the division between paid work and domestic labor.
Selected references


2) Gender relations of power: the way in which control, authority and force are exercised along gender lines, including organizational hierarchy, legal power, and collective and individual violence.
Boni-Le Goff, Isabel & Le Feuvre, Nicky (2017) « Professions from a Gendered Perspective », Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Business and Management, Oxford: Oxford University Press doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.8


3) Emotion and human relations: the way in which attachment and antagonism among people and groups are organized along gender lines, including feelings of solidarity, prejudice and disdain, and sexual attraction and repulsion.
Boni-Le Goff I., Le Feuvre N., Lépinard E., Mallard G. (2019) « Do Gender Regimes Matter? Converging and Diverging Career Prospects among Young French and Swiss Lawyers », in M. Choroszewicz & T. L. Adams (eds.) Gender, Age and Inequality in the Professions, London: Routledge, Coll. Gender and Organization: 114-134. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351052467


4) Gender culture and symbolism: the way in which gender identities are defined in culture, the language and symbols of gender difference, and the prevailing beliefs and attitudes about gender.
Connell, R. W. (1987) Gender and Power: Society, the Person & Sexual Politics, Chichester: Wiley.  


Such gender regimes play out in the macro, meso and micro-levels, each level featuring specific (but nevertheless complementary) social processes: historical construction and institutionalization of women's and men's relationship to the labour market and the family in various societal contexts (macro); conformity and divergence from the historical legacy in specific institutional/occupational settings (meso) and individual management of normative environments by individuals (micro).  
Connell, R. W. (2006). Glass ceilings or gendered institutions? Mapping the gender regimes of public sector worksites. Public Administration Review, 66(6), 837-849.  


==Selected references==
Crompton, Rosemary & Le Feuvre, Nicky (1996) “Paid Employment and the Changing System of Gender Relations: A Cross-National Comparison”, Sociology, Vol 30, n° 3: 427-445.


Bataille, P., Le Feuvre, N., Kradolfer, S. (2017) “Should I Stay or Should I Go? The effects of precariousness on the gendered career aspirations of postdocs in Switzerland”, ''European Educational Research Journal'', 16(2-3): 313-331.
Le Feuvre, Nicky (2010) “Feminising professions in Britain and France: How countries differ”, in Jacqueline Scott, Rosemary Crompton & Clare Lyonette (eds.) Gender Inequalities in the 21st Century: New Barriers and Continuing Constraints, London: Edward Elgar. 126-149


Connell, R. (2006). Glass ceilings or gendered institutions? Mapping the gender regimes of public sector worksites. ''Public administration review,'' 66(6), 837-849.
Zinn, Isabelle & Le Feuvre, Nicky (2013) « Ambivalent Gender Accountability: Male Florists in the Swiss Context », Recherches sociologiques et anthropologiques, Special issue “Transgressing Gender at Work: Men in ‘Feminine’ Jobs”, 44(2): 21-45 doi.10.4000/rsa.1027
 
Crompton, R. & Le Feuvre, N. (2000) “The Realities and Representations of Equal Opportunities in Britain and France”, ''European Journal of Social Policy'', 10 (4): 334-348.

Revision as of 09:26, 7 October 2020

Glossaire LIVES Gender Regimes According to the seminal work of Raewyn Connell (1987), a ‘gender regime’ refers to several distinct but interrelated dimensions of gender relations in a given sociohistorical context. It provides the normative context for particular events, aspirations, relationships and practices to unfold. According to Connell (2006), a ‘gender regime’ is composed of: 1) The sexual division of labour: the way in which production and consumption are arranged along gender lines, including the gendering of occupations and the spatial and symbolic division between paid work, caring and domestic labour, and the distribution of economic rewards and resources. 2) The distribution of power: the way in which control, authority and force are exercised along gender lines, including organizational hierarchies, access to political power, and collective and individual forms of violence. 3) Interpersonal interactions and emotions: the way in which attachment and antagonism between people and groups are organized along gender lines, including feelings of solidarity, prejudice and disdain, sexual attraction and repulsion. 4) Cultural and symbolic representations: the way in which gender identities are defined in culture, the language and symbols of gender difference, and the prevailing beliefs and attitudes about gender. Such gender regimes play out simultaneously at the macro, meso and micro-levels of society; each level relating to specific social processes: the historical construction of women's and men's relationship to the labour market and to the family in various societal contexts (the macro-level ‘gender order’ or ‘gender contract’, see Crompton & Le Feuvre 1996; Le Feuvre, 2010); the institutionalisation of the different dimensions of the ‘gender regime’ in specific organisational / occupational settings (the meso-level ‘gender arrangement’ or ‘gender script’, see Boni-Le Goff & Le Feuvre, 2017; Boni-Le Goff et al., 2019) and the daily management of normative environments by individuals (the micro-level ‘gender practices’ or the corporeal manifestation of ‘gender identities’, see Zinn & Le Feuvre, 2013). However, Connell and those who have been inspired by her work are sensitive to the potential tensions, or even contradictions, that can exist between the historically constructed societal pattern of gender relations (e.g. the ‘male breadwinner / female carer’ model of the sexual division of labour than has been enshrined in many social protection policies) at the meso-level, and the more localised configurations, that may conform to or depart from the wider gender order. Using the notion of ‘gender regime’ implies paying as much analytical attention to inconsistencies and to the forces for social change as to structural constraints and the mechanisms of social reproduction.

Selected references

Boni-Le Goff, Isabel & Le Feuvre, Nicky (2017) « Professions from a Gendered Perspective », Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Business and Management, Oxford: Oxford University Press doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780190224851.013.8

Boni-Le Goff I., Le Feuvre N., Lépinard E., Mallard G. (2019) « Do Gender Regimes Matter? Converging and Diverging Career Prospects among Young French and Swiss Lawyers », in M. Choroszewicz & T. L. Adams (eds.) Gender, Age and Inequality in the Professions, London: Routledge, Coll. Gender and Organization: 114-134. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351052467

Connell, R. W. (1987) Gender and Power: Society, the Person & Sexual Politics, Chichester: Wiley.

Connell, R. W. (2006). Glass ceilings or gendered institutions? Mapping the gender regimes of public sector worksites. Public Administration Review, 66(6), 837-849.

Crompton, Rosemary & Le Feuvre, Nicky (1996) “Paid Employment and the Changing System of Gender Relations: A Cross-National Comparison”, Sociology, Vol 30, n° 3: 427-445.

Le Feuvre, Nicky (2010) “Feminising professions in Britain and France: How countries differ”, in Jacqueline Scott, Rosemary Crompton & Clare Lyonette (eds.) Gender Inequalities in the 21st Century: New Barriers and Continuing Constraints, London: Edward Elgar. 126-149

Zinn, Isabelle & Le Feuvre, Nicky (2013) « Ambivalent Gender Accountability: Male Florists in the Swiss Context », Recherches sociologiques et anthropologiques, Special issue “Transgressing Gender at Work: Men in ‘Feminine’ Jobs”, 44(2): 21-45 doi.10.4000/rsa.1027