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Glass escalator

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The term "glass escalator" was introduced by Christine L. Williams in her article "The Glass Escalator: Hidden Advantages for Men in the "Female" Professions" published in August 1992. The glass escalator refers to the way men, namely heterosexual white men, are put on a fast track to advanced positions when entering primarily female-dominated professions. It is most present in "pink collar" professions, such as those in hands-on healthcare work or school teaching. Feminized care professions often pay lower wages than stereotypically male professions, but males experience a phenomenon in which they earn higher wages and have faster career mobility when they enter feminine careers. This idea is akin to the more well-known idea of the glass ceiling, which explains the reality that women face when they fail to advance in the workplace. However, it has been found that men of minority backgrounds do not reap the same benefits of the glass escalator as men in the majority.

Professional advancement

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Whether the career is woman-dominated, men-dominated, or gender-balanced, men assume leadership positions at faster rates than women. When considering men in female-dominated professions, the four professions often examined for this phenomenon are teaching, nursing, social work, and librarianship. These professions are sex-segregated and have much higher percentages of women working them. Although these professions have gained more men in the past few decades, they remain sex-segregated and employ mostly women. Williams does acknowledge that it is rare to find professions where men and women have equal representation at the same job level.

Often in these jobs, when men are hired, they are fast tracked to higher positions in roles of administration and leadership. This happens even when the men had little desire for these roles when applying and interviewing for their job. Christine L. Williams suggests that "as if on a moving escalator, they must work to stay in place,"[1] suggesting that their ascent into leadership roles will be effortless and inevitable. In addition to this inevitability, men are often pressured to take on these roles. It is suggested that this is because characteristics associated with men and masculinity are viewed as more desirable than feminine characteristics associated with womanhood.

Negative aspects

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Despite many of these advantages faced by men in these professions, they also face some negative aspects. In Christine L. William's research, she interviewed a male nurse who had intentions of going to grad school for family and child nursing. He was discouraged and pushed to go into adult nursing because of the heavier feminine connotation family and child nursing has as well as the sometimes-negative connotation of men working with children.[1] This was a similar experience among other men she had interviewed. No matter what the profession was, the men were discouraged from going towards more feminine areas of their career and pushed towards the more masculine side.

Men in nursing

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The experience of riding the glass escalator is one most often experienced by heterosexual white men. This can be seen when looking at men in nursing. Black men in nursing do not get to ride the glass escalator. In fact, they tend to receive discrimination. Adia Harvey Wingfield discusses this in her research entitled "Racializing the Glass Escalator: Reconsidering Men's Experiences with Women's Work".[2] Harvey Wingfield attributes black men's experience in nursing to gendered racism.

While many men who enter nursing receive a warm welcome from women colleagues as "a response to the fact that professions dominated by women are frequently low in salary and status and that greater numbers of men help improve prestige and pay",[2] this experience is not shared by black men in nursing. Harvey Wingfield suggests that this is due to the socially constructed idea of black men being framed as threats to white women. Their higher ups may treat them poorly due to negative stereotypes about black men. They also find it harder to advance in their career because they are viewed as less qualified; while white male nurses may be mistaken by patients for doctors, black male nurses get mistaken for janitors.

Black men do not have the same experience, nor the advantages, of the men in Williams' original work.[1] Wingfield concludes that a shared racial identity with one's coworkers facilitates access to the glass escalator.[2] Black men, some of whom are tokens in the field of nursing, do not share the racial identity of many of their female (and dominantly white) colleagues. White women tend not to value working with nurses of color, particularly when they are men.[2] As a result, they do not assist in enhancing their black male colleagues' careers in nursing.

The glass escalator for nursing has also been found to exist in countries besides the United States. In Canada, male nurses are more likely to be in a higher income bracket if they are registered nurses.[3] Additionally, male psychiatric nurses are more likely to be in management positions. In the UK, male nurses earn higher wages and have faster attainment of higher grades from the point of registration. Also, for specialist and advanced nurses, it has been seen that males are able to achieve a higher paid role faster than females.[4]

Men in teaching

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Men in teaching have also been known to ascend the glass escalator into school administrative leadership positions. Andrew J. Cognard-Black examines the experience of men in teaching in "Riding the Glass Escalator to the Principal’s Office: Sex-Atypical Work Among Token Men in the United States".[5] Cognard-Black notes that at the start of the 1990s, 28% of teachers were men.[5] Through his research, he found that men had a much greater chance of advancing upward into school administrative positions than women.

Cognard-Black also conducted another study that revealed that men who work in elementary schools are three times more likely than women to rise to higher positions in administration. This, however, could be because of a male's stronger aspiration to become a principal than a female. Cognard-Black's research suggests that this could be due to the encouragement of male ambition within the workplace and women feeling as if they are in a socially constructed box.[6]

Contradictions

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Christine Williams stated in her revisit to the topic of the "glass escalator" that in her original publication in 1992, she failed to address the issue of intersectionality in terms of race, sexuality, and class. She claimed that her original publication was based on the assumption of traditional work organizations that are now changing due to neoliberalism. She updated her stance on gender equality in the workplace to align with 21st century values, such as allowing the glass escalator to include how racism, homophobia, and class inequality advantage some groups of men and exclude and discriminate against others. Williams also stated that it might be best just to "retire" the concept of the glass escalator altogether.

There has been evidence that in order to ride the glass escalator, transgender and gay men need to conform to heteronormative appearances and behavior.[7] Williams concludes that "Only those who embody the appropriate class-based aesthetic can ride the glass escalator".[8]

As mentioned earlier, Michelle Budig conducted a study in 2014 that measured the extent to which men’s advantages in earnings are greater, smaller, or the same across three types of workplaces: male-dominated, female-dominated, and gender-balanced. She found that the male wage advantage is the same across the three domains, concluding that there is no gender “tokenism” that causes men to earn more than women in female-dominated workplaces, it is just male advantage in general that causes wage differences.[9]

When examining how men experience benefits compared to other groups, white men receive the most monetary benefits compared to females and non-white men. The glass ceiling has been found to be mostly exclusive to white men compared to other races.[10] Additionally, Researcher James Maume found strong predictive power that men do benefit from a glass escalator, but men and women do not have access to the same benefits due to the concept of the glass ceiling.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Williams, Christine (Aug 1992). "The Glass Escalator: Hidden Advantages for Men in the "Female" Professions". Social Problems. 39 (3): 253–267. doi:10.1525/sp.1992.39.3.03x0034h. JSTOR 3096961.
  2. ^ a b c d Wingfield, A. H. (2009). "Racializing the Glass Escalator: Reconsidering Men's Experiences with Women's Work". Gender & Society. 23 (1): 5–26. doi:10.1177/0891243208323054. S2CID 144241373.
  3. ^ Buhr, Karen (2011-10-03). "Is There a Glass Escalator for Male Nurses in Canada?". Nursing Leadership. 24 (3): 86–100. doi:10.12927/cjnl.2011.22603. ISSN 1929-6355. PMID 22008624.
  4. ^ Punshon, Geoffrey; Maclaine, Katrina; Trevatt, Paul; Radford, Mark; Shanley, Oliver; Leary, Alison (May 2019). "Nursing pay by gender distribution in the UK - does the Glass Escalator still exist?". International Journal of Nursing Studies. 93: 21–29. doi:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2019.02.008. PMID 30836236. S2CID 73460752.
  5. ^ a b COGNARD-BLACK, Andrew J (2012). "RIDING THE GLASS ESCALATOR TO THE PRINCIPAL'S OFFICE: Sex-atypical Work among Token Men in the United States". Teorija in Praksa. 49 (6): 878–900.
  6. ^ Cognard-Black, Andrew J. (2004). "WILL THEY STAY, OR WILL THEY GO? Sex-Atypical Work among Token Men Who Teach". The Sociological Quarterly. 45 (1): 113–139. doi:10.1111/j.1533-8525.2004.tb02400.x. ISSN 1533-8525. S2CID 144823232.
  7. ^ Williams, Christine L. (2013-06-11). "The Glass Escalator, Revisited". Gender & Society. 27 (5): 609–629. doi:10.1177/0891243213490232. hdl:10983/1211. ISSN 0891-2432. S2CID 149362272.
  8. ^ Wingfield, A. H. (2009). "Racializing the Glass Escalator: Reconsidering Men's Experiences with Women's Work". Gender & Society. 23 (1): 5–26. doi:10.1177/0891243208323054. S2CID 144241373.
  9. ^ Budig, Michelle J. (2002-05-01). "Male Advantage and the Gender Composition of Jobs: Who Rides the Glass Escalator?". Social Problems. 49 (2): 258–277. doi:10.1525/sp.2002.49.2.258. ISSN 0037-7791.
  10. ^ Smith, Ryan A. (2011-12-15). "Money, Benefits, and Power: A Test of the Glass Ceiling and Glass Escalator Hypotheses". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. doi:10.1177/0002716211422038. S2CID 47009961.
  11. ^ Cognard-Black, Andrew J. Riding the glass escalator to the principal's office : sex-atypical work among token men in the United States. OCLC 905150063.