Gender,family and career in the era of boundarylessness: determinants and effects of intra- and inter-organizational mobility |
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Authors: | P. Monique Valcour Pamela Tolbert |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Organizational Studies, Carroll School of Management, Boston College, Fulton Hall 426A, 140 Commonwealth Avenue, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA (tel: +607 257 0445;2. fax: +617 552 4230;3. e-mail: valcour@bc.edu).;4. Cornell Careers Institute and Department of Organizational Behavior, School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA (tel: +607 255 9527;5. fax: +607 255 8484;6. e-mail: pst3@cornell.edu). |
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Abstract: | Changes in patterns of long-term employment make understanding the determinants of different career forms increasingly important to careers research. At the same time, the rise of dual-earner families demands greater attention to the ways in which gender and family characteristics shape careers than has been paid by traditional research. This paper addresses these issues, examining the determinants and consequences of intra-organizational and inter-organizational mobility, using a sample of employees from dual-earner couples. We find significant gender differences in these different types of career mobility, and in the effect of family relations on different forms of mobility. Women experience more inter-organizational mobility, while men experience more intraorganizational mobility. Having more children positively influences men's intra-organizational mobility, but increases inter-organizational mobility for women. Marital instability increases intra-organizational mobility among women, but has no effect among men. Each form of mobility has distinctive effects on objective and subjective indicators of career success for both men and women. Moving between organizations tends to depress earnings, but has no effect on how successful people feel in their careers. Job changes within an organization increase earnings, but have a negative effect on perceived success. |
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Keywords: | Career mobility success boundaryless careers gender differences family |
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