Miner-Rubino Kathi, Cortina Lilia M
Department of Psychology, Women's Studies Program, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1109, USA.
J Occup Health Psychol. 2004 Apr;9(2):107-22. doi: 10.1037/1076-8998.9.2.107.
This study examined how working in an organizational context perceived as hostile toward women affects employees' well-being, even in the absence of personal hostility experiences. Participants were 289 public-sector employees who denied any personal history of being targeted with general or gender-based hostility at work. They completed measures of personal demographics, occupational and physical well-being, and perceptions of the organizational context for women. Results showed that 2 contextual indices of hostility toward women related to declines in well-being for male and female employees. The gender ratio of the workgroup moderated this relationship, with employees in male-skewed units reporting the most negative effects. These findings suggest that all employees in the workplace can suffer from working in a context of perceived misogyny.
本研究探讨了在被认为对女性怀有敌意的组织环境中工作如何影响员工的幸福感,即便员工没有个人遭受敌意的经历。参与者为289名公共部门员工,他们否认在工作中有过遭受一般敌意或基于性别的敌意的个人经历。他们完成了关于个人人口统计学、职业和身体幸福感以及对女性组织环境认知的测量。结果表明,与对女性的敌意相关的2个情境指标与男性和女性员工幸福感的下降有关。工作群体的性别比例调节了这种关系,在男性占主导的单位中工作的员工报告的负面影响最大。这些发现表明,职场中的所有员工都可能因在存在厌女症观念的环境中工作而受到影响。