When the “Manny” is the Boss. An Exploratory Study into Discrimination and Preferential Treatment Perceived by Men Childcare Business Owners

There are three major oversights in the extant literature on occupational segregation. Firstly, the study of segregation is confined to employed workers ignoring the experiences of those in self-employment. Secondly, gender segregation tends to be studied from the perspective of women : there are fe...

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Main Author: Natalie Sappleton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université Catholique de Louvain 2013-12-01
Series:Recherches Sociologiques et Anthropologiques
Subjects:
men
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/rsa/1066
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spelling doaj-838dcb9c307f48ac8e1ba724d65a5c512020-11-25T02:11:05ZengUniversité Catholique de LouvainRecherches Sociologiques et Anthropologiques1782-15922033-74852013-12-014429311310.4000/rsa.1066When the “Manny” is the Boss. An Exploratory Study into Discrimination and Preferential Treatment Perceived by Men Childcare Business OwnersNatalie SappletonThere are three major oversights in the extant literature on occupational segregation. Firstly, the study of segregation is confined to employed workers ignoring the experiences of those in self-employment. Secondly, gender segregation tends to be studied from the perspective of women : there are few published accounts of the experiences of men in traditionally female roles. Finally, existing studies tend to document the negative, but not the positive consequences of gender segregation. This paper begins to address these gaps through an explorative, descriptive study comparing the experiences of men business owners in both gender congruent (construction and sound recording) and gender incongruent (childcare) sectors. 93 New York City based male business owners com­pleted a survey into experiences of positive and negative discrimination by individuals with whom they do business. The data they provided suggest that men owners of childcare businesses do experience gender discrimination. Although some respondents reported preferential treatment from customers, on the whole the evidence points to greater negative than positive discrimination against male owners of childcare businesses.http://journals.openedition.org/rsa/1066childcaregender segregationgender stereotypingmasculinitiesmen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natalie Sappleton
spellingShingle Natalie Sappleton
When the “Manny” is the Boss. An Exploratory Study into Discrimination and Preferential Treatment Perceived by Men Childcare Business Owners
Recherches Sociologiques et Anthropologiques
childcare
gender segregation
gender stereotyping
masculinities
men
author_facet Natalie Sappleton
author_sort Natalie Sappleton
title When the “Manny” is the Boss. An Exploratory Study into Discrimination and Preferential Treatment Perceived by Men Childcare Business Owners
title_short When the “Manny” is the Boss. An Exploratory Study into Discrimination and Preferential Treatment Perceived by Men Childcare Business Owners
title_full When the “Manny” is the Boss. An Exploratory Study into Discrimination and Preferential Treatment Perceived by Men Childcare Business Owners
title_fullStr When the “Manny” is the Boss. An Exploratory Study into Discrimination and Preferential Treatment Perceived by Men Childcare Business Owners
title_full_unstemmed When the “Manny” is the Boss. An Exploratory Study into Discrimination and Preferential Treatment Perceived by Men Childcare Business Owners
title_sort when the “manny” is the boss. an exploratory study into discrimination and preferential treatment perceived by men childcare business owners
publisher Université Catholique de Louvain
series Recherches Sociologiques et Anthropologiques
issn 1782-1592
2033-7485
publishDate 2013-12-01
description There are three major oversights in the extant literature on occupational segregation. Firstly, the study of segregation is confined to employed workers ignoring the experiences of those in self-employment. Secondly, gender segregation tends to be studied from the perspective of women : there are few published accounts of the experiences of men in traditionally female roles. Finally, existing studies tend to document the negative, but not the positive consequences of gender segregation. This paper begins to address these gaps through an explorative, descriptive study comparing the experiences of men business owners in both gender congruent (construction and sound recording) and gender incongruent (childcare) sectors. 93 New York City based male business owners com­pleted a survey into experiences of positive and negative discrimination by individuals with whom they do business. The data they provided suggest that men owners of childcare businesses do experience gender discrimination. Although some respondents reported preferential treatment from customers, on the whole the evidence points to greater negative than positive discrimination against male owners of childcare businesses.
topic childcare
gender segregation
gender stereotyping
masculinities
men
url http://journals.openedition.org/rsa/1066
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