Corvinus
Corvinus

The impact of gender-role-orientations on subjective career success: a multilevel study of 36 societies

Terpstra-Tong, Jane, Ralston, David A., Treviño, Len, Karam, Charlotte, Furrer, Olivier, Froese, Fabian, Tjemkes, Brian, Darder, Fidel León, Richards, Malika, Dabic, Marina, Li, Yongjuan, Fu, Pingping, Molteni, Mario, Palmer, Ian, Tučková, Zuzana, Szabo, Erna, Poeschl, Gabrielle, Hemmert, Martin, Butt, Arif, de la Garza, Teresa, Susniene, Dalia, Suzuki, Satoko, Srinivasan, Narasimhan, Gutierrez, Jamie Ruiz, Ricard, Antonin, Buzády, Zoltán ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5553-7583, Paparella, Luis Sigala, Morales, Oswaldo, Naidoo, Vik and Kangasniemi-Haapala, Maria (2022) The impact of gender-role-orientations on subjective career success: a multilevel study of 36 societies. Journal of vocational behaviour, 38 . DOI 10.1016/j.jvb.2022.103773

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvb.2022.103773


Abstract

We investigate the relationships between gender-role-orientation (i.e., androgynous, masculine, feminine and undifferentiated) and subjective career success among business professionals from 36 societies. Drawing on the resource management perspective, we predict that androgynous individuals will report the highest subjective career success, followed by masculine, feminine, and undifferentiated individuals. We also postulate that meso-organizational culture and macro- societal values will have moderating effects on gender role's impact on subjective career success. The results of our hierarchical linear models support the hypothesized hierarchy of the relationships between gender-role-orientations and subjective career success. However, we found that ethical achievement values at the societal culture level was the only variable that had a positive moderating impact on the relationship between feminine orientation and subjective career success. Thus, our findings of minimal moderation effect suggest that meso- and macro- level environments may not play a significant role in determining an individual's perception of career success.

Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:Gender-role-orientation ; Conservation of resources ; BEM sex role inventory (BSRI) ; Hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) ; Subject career success ; Psychological androgyny
Divisions:Faculty of Business Administration > Institute of Business Economics > Department of Decision Sciences
Subjects:Human resource management
DOI:10.1016/j.jvb.2022.103773
ID Code:11061
Deposited By: MTMT SWORD
Deposited On:11 Apr 2025 12:20
Last Modified:11 Apr 2025 12:20

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