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Women in Professional IT Jobs in the UK: Old Wine in New Bottles?;
Women in Professional IT Jobs in the UK: Old Wine in New Bottles?

dc.creatorGlover, Judith
dc.creatorGuerrier, Yvonne
dc.date2010-03-22
dc.identifierhttps://www.jotmi.org/index.php/GT/article/view/art145
dc.identifier10.4067/S0718-27242010000100007
dc.descriptionA first aim of this article is to give a current picture of women’s employment in the IT sector in the UK, focusing on occupational sex segregation and on the gender pay gap. This shows that women’s low representation in the sector as a whole and in specific professional roles continues to be a persistent issue. We also review the literature that explains women’s position in IT employment, focusing particularly on new research that points up the importance of the ‘hybrid’ technical/soft skills jobs that employers believe are new opportunities for women. Whilst these may be new opportunities, we question whether they are good opportunities. There are implications, therefore, for both employees and employers.en-US
dc.descriptionA first aim of this article is to give a current picture of women’s employment in the IT sector in the UK, focusing on occupational sex segregation and on the gender pay gap. This shows that women’s low representation in the sector as a whole and in specific professional roles continues to be a persistent issue. We also review the literature that explains women’s position in IT employment, focusing particularly on new research that points up the importance of the ‘hybrid’ technical/soft skills jobs that employers believe are new opportunities for women. Whilst these may be new opportunities, we question whether they are good opportunities. There are implications, therefore, for both employees and employers.es-ES
dc.descriptionA first aim of this article is to give a current picture of women’s employment in the IT sector in the UK, focusing on occupational sex segregation and on the gender pay gap. This shows that women’s low representation in the sector as a whole and in specific professional roles continues to be a persistent issue. We also review the literature that explains women’s position in IT employment, focusing particularly on new research that points up the importance of the ‘hybrid’ technical/soft skills jobs that employers believe are new opportunities for women. Whilst these may be new opportunities, we question whether they are good opportunities. There are implications, therefore, for both employees and employers.pt-BR
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.languageeng
dc.publisherFacultad de Economía y Negocios, Universidad Alberto Hurtadoen-US
dc.relationhttps://www.jotmi.org/index.php/GT/article/view/art145/526
dc.rightsCopyright (c) 2010 Journal of Technology Management & Innovationen-US
dc.rightshttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0en-US
dc.sourceJournal of Technology Management & Innovation; Vol. 5 No. 1 (2010); 85-94en-US
dc.sourceJournal of Technology Management & Innovation; Vol. 5 Núm. 1 (2010); 85-94es-ES
dc.source0718-2724
dc.subjectwomen in IT employmenten-US
dc.subjecthybrid jobsen-US
dc.subjectgendered hybrid jobsen-US
dc.subjectboundaryless career.en-US
dc.titleWomen in Professional IT Jobs in the UK: Old Wine in New Bottles?en-US
dc.titleWomen in Professional IT Jobs in the UK: Old Wine in New Bottles?es-ES
dc.titleWomen in Professional IT Jobs in the UK: Old Wine in New Bottles?pt-BR
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.typeArtículo revisado por paresen-US


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