Organisational culture as perceived by employment equity candidates.

To address the somewhat perplexing issue of the reported unacceptably slow pace of transformation in the private sector, the present research report explored organisational culture as perceived by Employment Equity candidates in a South African organisation. The study was conducted in the Head Offic...

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Main Author: Ramodibe, Refiloe Mmoti
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8151
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-81512019-05-11T03:42:05Z Organisational culture as perceived by employment equity candidates. Ramodibe, Refiloe Mmoti To address the somewhat perplexing issue of the reported unacceptably slow pace of transformation in the private sector, the present research report explored organisational culture as perceived by Employment Equity candidates in a South African organisation. The study was conducted in the Head Office of one of the largest Banks in South Africa. The sample in the current research was comprised of 15 employees working in professional jobs from designated groups (females, Black Africans, Coloureds, Asians) as stipulated by the Employment Equity Act of 1998. All fifteen participants were interviewed individually and the recorded interviews were transcribed. Thematic analysis methodology was employed and themes were extracted using the theoretically-driven thematic analysis approach. Literature on organisational culture theory and employment equity practices was used as a guide for coding data and extracting themes. The outcomes of the study indicated that employment equity beneficiaries working within a bank feel that there is an effort on the Bank’s part to accommodate them. This is apparent in how they try to integrate their family and cultural values in their operations. The findings also indicate that Whites, especially males, are perceived as receiving preferential treatment over Blacks and females. They are perceived as having more opportunities to advance to senior levels. The bank was also seen as being committed to transformation and employment equity on paper, however, there is still a great deal of resistance embedded in aspects of the culture and from those who are responsible for the implementation of employment equity policies. 2010-05-28T07:57:50Z 2010-05-28T07:57:50Z 2010-05-28T07:57:50Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8151 en application/pdf application/pdf application/pdf
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language en
format Others
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description To address the somewhat perplexing issue of the reported unacceptably slow pace of transformation in the private sector, the present research report explored organisational culture as perceived by Employment Equity candidates in a South African organisation. The study was conducted in the Head Office of one of the largest Banks in South Africa. The sample in the current research was comprised of 15 employees working in professional jobs from designated groups (females, Black Africans, Coloureds, Asians) as stipulated by the Employment Equity Act of 1998. All fifteen participants were interviewed individually and the recorded interviews were transcribed. Thematic analysis methodology was employed and themes were extracted using the theoretically-driven thematic analysis approach. Literature on organisational culture theory and employment equity practices was used as a guide for coding data and extracting themes. The outcomes of the study indicated that employment equity beneficiaries working within a bank feel that there is an effort on the Bank’s part to accommodate them. This is apparent in how they try to integrate their family and cultural values in their operations. The findings also indicate that Whites, especially males, are perceived as receiving preferential treatment over Blacks and females. They are perceived as having more opportunities to advance to senior levels. The bank was also seen as being committed to transformation and employment equity on paper, however, there is still a great deal of resistance embedded in aspects of the culture and from those who are responsible for the implementation of employment equity policies.
author Ramodibe, Refiloe Mmoti
spellingShingle Ramodibe, Refiloe Mmoti
Organisational culture as perceived by employment equity candidates.
author_facet Ramodibe, Refiloe Mmoti
author_sort Ramodibe, Refiloe Mmoti
title Organisational culture as perceived by employment equity candidates.
title_short Organisational culture as perceived by employment equity candidates.
title_full Organisational culture as perceived by employment equity candidates.
title_fullStr Organisational culture as perceived by employment equity candidates.
title_full_unstemmed Organisational culture as perceived by employment equity candidates.
title_sort organisational culture as perceived by employment equity candidates.
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8151
work_keys_str_mv AT ramodiberefiloemmoti organisationalcultureasperceivedbyemploymentequitycandidates
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