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  4. “Maybe Baby?” - The Employment Risk of Potential Parenthood
 
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“Maybe Baby?” - The Employment Risk of Potential Parenthood

Journal
Journal of Applied Social Psychology
ISSN
0021-9029
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2021-06-10
Author(s)
Gloor, Jamie  
Okimoto, Tyler G.
King, Eden B.
DOI
10.1111/jasp.12799
Research Team
Eugenia Bajet Mestre (PhD Student, CCDI)
Professor Dr. Gudrun Sander (PRIMA Host & CCDI Director)
Professor Dr. Winfried Ruigrok (CCDI Director), Eugenia Bajet Mestre (PhD Student, CCDI)
Professor Dr. Gudrun Sander (PRIMA Host & CCDI Director)
Professor D
Abstract (De)
Research grounded in gender role theories has shown that women face numerous employment disadvantages relative to men, with mothers often facing the greatest obstacles. We extend this literature by proposing that motherhood is not a necessary condition for women to face motherhood penalties. Instead, managers’ expectations that an applicant will have a child in the near future (i.e., “maybe baby” expectations) increases their perceptions of risk associated with employing childfree, childbearing-aged women–but not men. Investigating the intersection of gender and age, and integrating economic theories of discrimination, we conceptualize hiring as a risk assessment process, proposing that managers’ risk perceptions drive more precarious employment conditions for this group of women. Results from a field study with early career employees (Study 1) and a randomized experiment with hiring managers (Study 2) support our predictions across attitudinal (e.g., desire to offer a temporary job contract; Study 2) and objective indicators (e.g., having a temporary job contract; Study 1); female applicants can also mitigate this “maybe baby” risk by signaling a lack of interest in having children or by emphasizing their commitment and work ethic (Study 2). Our findings suggest that the perceived risks of parenthood can be hazardous for child-bearing-aged, childfree working women who simply may become parents (vs. men and mothers; vs. childfree women who are significantly younger or older than the average age of first childbearing in the local context).
Language
English
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
HSG Profile Area
None
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Wiley
Volume
Early View online
URL
https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/110321
Subject(s)

business studies

Division(s)

FIM - Research Instit...

Eprints ID
263314
File(s)
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Thumbnail Image

open.access

Name

Gloor, Okimoto, & King forthcoming JASP.pdf

Size

1.07 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

5e49489c95ccdd21ee8a564b5854a93f

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