Enemy at the (house) gates: permanence of gender discrimination in public relations career promotion in Latin America

This study develops models capable of finding empirical relations between social factors in practitioners’ private lives, that is to say, extra-organizational or external factors to the work environment that affect the career promotion of female professionals in public relations. The aim is to anal...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ángeles Moreno, Nadia Khalil, Ralph Tench
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Navarra 2021-05-01
Series:Communication & Society (Formerly Comunicación y Sociedad)
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.unav.edu/index.php/communication-and-society/article/view/40107
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spelling doaj-19c1b62ec52d4947a5c3bb54bc00aa8f2021-06-01T07:07:03ZengUniversidad de NavarraCommunication & Society (Formerly Comunicación y Sociedad)2386-78762021-05-0134310.15581/003.34.3.169-183Enemy at the (house) gates: permanence of gender discrimination in public relations career promotion in Latin AmericaÁngeles Moreno0Nadia Khalil1Ralph Tench2Universidad Rey Juan CarlosUniversidad Rey Juan CarlosLeeds Business School This study develops models capable of finding empirical relations between social factors in practitioners’ private lives, that is to say, extra-organizational or external factors to the work environment that affect the career promotion of female professionals in public relations. The aim is to analyse some gender issues at a global level by exploring the Latin American subcontinent, where there is an accepted lack of knowledge. With that purpose, the focus is on the public relations practitioners’ care responsibilities (such as living with children or dependents) and if these responsibilities influence their opportunities for career development in Latin American countries. Quantitative data from 803 Latin American practitioners representing 18 countries were analysed through predictive multivariable analysis with data mining techniques, using hierarchical decision trees. The applied statistical method is valid to explain some of the extra-organizational factors that affect female career promotion in public relations and can be used for other studies. Results empirically found that family dependency and caring responsibilities affect the career opportunities of women, and that family responsibilities do not affect men’s chances to career promotion. Therefore, the predictive analysis statistically proves that gender can be a determinant factor for career promotion in these circumstances.   https://revistas.unav.edu/index.php/communication-and-society/article/view/40107Public relationscommunication practitionersgender discriminationfemale career promotionfamily dependencyLatin America
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ángeles Moreno
Nadia Khalil
Ralph Tench
spellingShingle Ángeles Moreno
Nadia Khalil
Ralph Tench
Enemy at the (house) gates: permanence of gender discrimination in public relations career promotion in Latin America
Communication & Society (Formerly Comunicación y Sociedad)
Public relations
communication practitioners
gender discrimination
female career promotion
family dependency
Latin America
author_facet Ángeles Moreno
Nadia Khalil
Ralph Tench
author_sort Ángeles Moreno
title Enemy at the (house) gates: permanence of gender discrimination in public relations career promotion in Latin America
title_short Enemy at the (house) gates: permanence of gender discrimination in public relations career promotion in Latin America
title_full Enemy at the (house) gates: permanence of gender discrimination in public relations career promotion in Latin America
title_fullStr Enemy at the (house) gates: permanence of gender discrimination in public relations career promotion in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Enemy at the (house) gates: permanence of gender discrimination in public relations career promotion in Latin America
title_sort enemy at the (house) gates: permanence of gender discrimination in public relations career promotion in latin america
publisher Universidad de Navarra
series Communication & Society (Formerly Comunicación y Sociedad)
issn 2386-7876
publishDate 2021-05-01
description This study develops models capable of finding empirical relations between social factors in practitioners’ private lives, that is to say, extra-organizational or external factors to the work environment that affect the career promotion of female professionals in public relations. The aim is to analyse some gender issues at a global level by exploring the Latin American subcontinent, where there is an accepted lack of knowledge. With that purpose, the focus is on the public relations practitioners’ care responsibilities (such as living with children or dependents) and if these responsibilities influence their opportunities for career development in Latin American countries. Quantitative data from 803 Latin American practitioners representing 18 countries were analysed through predictive multivariable analysis with data mining techniques, using hierarchical decision trees. The applied statistical method is valid to explain some of the extra-organizational factors that affect female career promotion in public relations and can be used for other studies. Results empirically found that family dependency and caring responsibilities affect the career opportunities of women, and that family responsibilities do not affect men’s chances to career promotion. Therefore, the predictive analysis statistically proves that gender can be a determinant factor for career promotion in these circumstances.  
topic Public relations
communication practitioners
gender discrimination
female career promotion
family dependency
Latin America
url https://revistas.unav.edu/index.php/communication-and-society/article/view/40107
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AT ralphtench enemyatthehousegatespermanenceofgenderdiscriminationinpublicrelationscareerpromotioninlatinamerica
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