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Gender, Work and Organization2014 - 2025
 Current editor(s): David Knights, Deborah Kerfoot and Ida Sabelis From Wiley BlackwellBibliographic data for series maintained by Wiley Content Delivery ().
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 Volume 29, issue 6, 2022
 
  Theorizing gender desegregation as political work: The case of the Welsh Labour Party   pp. 1747-1763 Owain Smolović Jones, Sanela Smolović Jones, Scott Taylor and Emily Yarrow“The workload is staggering”: Changing working conditions of stay‐at‐home mothers under COVID‐19 lockdowns   pp. 1764-1778 Awish Aslam and Tracey L. AdamsTracing networked images of gendered entrepreneurship online   pp. 1779-1795 Katrina Pritchard, Helen C. Williams and Maggie C. MillerAn ecofeminist position in critical practice: Challenging corporate truth in the Anthropocene   pp. 1796-1814 Charles Barthold, David Bevan and Hervé CorvellecNeoliberal feminism in old age: Femininity, work, and retirement in the aftermath of the Great Recession   pp. 1815-1830 Ella FegitzNegotiating racialized organizational spaces and intimacies: An ethnography of playpen strip club   pp. 1831-1848 Cristina Silva, Michelle Newton‐Francis and Salvador Vidal‐OrtizThe significance of trying: How organizational members meet the ambiguities of diversity   pp. 1849-1867 Annette Risberg and Hervé CorvellecHybrid gender colonization: The case of muxes   pp. 1868-1889 Jacobo Ramirez and Ana María MunarIntersectionality on screen. A coloniality perspective to understand popular culture representations of intersecting oppressions at work   pp. 1890-1909 Charles Barthold, Victor Krawczyk, Marco Berti and Vincenza PriolaEqual pay behind the “Glass Door”? The gender gap in upper management in a male‐dominated industry   pp. 1910-1926 Charlotte KräftGender and employment: Recalibrating women's position in work, organizations, and society in times of COVID‐19   pp. 1927-1934 Chantal Remery, Richard J. Petts, Joop Schippers and Mara A. YerkesMerging the public and private spheres of women's work: Narratives from women street food vendors during Covid‐19 crisis   pp. 1935-1951 Puja Guha, Annapurna Neti and Roshni LoboGendering boundary work: Experiences of work–family practices among Finnish working parents during COVID‐19 lockdown   pp. 1952-1968 Katri Otonkorpi‐Lehtoranta, Milla Salin, Mia Hakovirta and Anniina KaittilaReduced well‐being during the COVID‐19 pandemic – The role of working conditions   pp. 1969-1990 Gundula Zoch, Ann‐Christin Bächmann and Basha VicariHas the COVID‐19 pandemic changed gender‐ and parental‐status‐specific differences in working from home? Panel evidence from Germany   pp. 1991-2011 Anja‐Kristin Abendroth, Yvonne Lott, Lena Hipp, Dana Müller, Armin Sauermann and Tanja CarstensenChanging attitudes about the impact of women's employment on families: The COVID‐19 pandemic effect   pp. 2012-2033 Leen Vandecasteele, Katya Ivanova, Inge Sieben and Tim ReeskensThe gendered consequences of the COVID‐19 lockdown on unpaid work in Swiss dual earner couples with children   pp. 2034-2051 Stephanie Steinmetz, Leen Vandecasteele, Florence Lebert, Marieke Voorpostel and Oliver LippsTranslocational belongings: Intersectional dilemmas and social inequalities By Floya Anthias, first edition   pp. 2052-2055 Sajia FerdousLa conversation des sexes. Philosophie du consentement By Manon Garcia, Climats, Department of Flammarion (Ed.), 2021, ISBN: 978‐2‐0802‐4236‐5 (pbk) ISBN (epub): 978‐2‐08‐026838‐9 ISBN (PDF Web): 978‐2‐0802‐6841‐9 price: paperback €19, ebook: €13.99   pp. 2056-2060 Christine Naschberger Volume 29, issue 5, 2022
 
  Solidarity and mutual aid: Women organizing the “visible hand” urban commons   pp. 1405-1427 Zofia LapniewskaBaking injera in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: Women's invisible labor in the teff value chain   pp. 1428-1442 Diede Smith, Marina  de Regt and Addis Alem TekalignBadass marines: Resistance practices against the introduction of women in the Dutch military   pp. 1443-1462 Nina  van Douwen, Marieke  van den Brink and Yvonne BenschopInvisible work at work and the reproduction of gendered social service organizations   pp. 1463-1480 Einat Lavee and Amit KaplanFilling a gap in maternity care: The caring dilemma in doula practice   pp. 1481-1494 Christina YoungMaternity provision, contract status, and likelihood of returning to work: Evidence from research intensive universities in the UK   pp. 1495-1510 Joanna M. Davies, Lisa Jane Brighton, Florence Reedy and Sabrina BajwahQueer subjectivities in hospitality labor   pp. 1511-1525 Megan Sharp, David Farrugia, Julia Coffey, Steven Threadgold, Lisa Adkins and Rosalind GillOccupational stigma among further education teaching staff in hair and beauty: Mild but challenging   pp. 1526-1541 Oonagh M. HarnessNarratives from Casa Tina Martins' Women's referral center: Aesthetics of existence in the struggle against gender violence   pp. 1542-1561 Thaís Zimovski Garcia  de Oliveira, Rafael Diogo Pereira and Alexandre  de Pádua CarrieriTyred out: Natural aging and aesthetic labor in Pirelli's 2017 calendar   pp. 1562-1577 Katrina Pritchard and Rebecca WhitingViewed with suspicion, considered idle and mocked‐working caregiving fathers and fatherhood forfeits   pp. 1578-1593 Jasmine Kelland, Duncan Lewis and Virginia FisherA gay reflection on microaggressions, symbolic normativities, and pink hair   pp. 1594-1611 Aleksi SoiniWorking in nontraditional employment roles: Understanding and breaking down the barriers to gender segregation   pp. 1612-1616 Susan Durbin, Rae Cooper, Hazel Conley, Tessa Wright and Ana LopesMaping gendered social closure mechanisms through examination of seven male‐dominated occupations   pp. 1617-1637 Marta Ibáñez and Elisa García‐MingoFemale taxi drivers in Mexico City: Facing patriarchal structures as a force of oppression   pp. 1638-1657 Anri HiramatsuGender inequality in an “Equal” environment   pp. 1658-1675 Valerie Caven, Elena Navarro Astor and Vita Urbanavičienė‘I’ll never be one of the boys’: Gender harassment of women working as pilots and automotive tradespeople   pp. 1676-1691 Meraiah Foley, Sarah Oxenbridge, Rae Cooper and Marian BairdMale‐dominated workplaces and the power of masculine privilege: A comparison of the Australian political and construction sectors   pp. 1692-1711 Natalie Galea and Louise ChappellWomen's formal networking: The relationship between networking activities and power   pp. 1712-1741 Vanda Papafilippou, Susan Durbin and Hazel ConleyCheffes de Cuisine: Women and Work in the Professional French Kitchen   pp. 1743-1745 Deborah A. Harris Volume 29, issue 4, 2022
 
  From pure academics to transformative scholars? The crisis of the “ideal academic” in a Peruvian university   pp. 971-987 Omar Manky and Sergio SaraviaLatina farmworkers' experiences: Maintaining dignity in an oppressive workplace   pp. 988-1007 Maira A. Areguin and Abigail J. StewartRestructuring masculinities and reshaping inequalities: Negotiations of (gendered) sales work and relations in an industrial organization   pp. 1008-1024 Kristina Johansson, Elias Andersson and Maria JohanssonSteely determination? Constructions of masculinity in a former UK steelworker community   pp. 1025-1040 Reece GarciaRethinking how we work with Acker's theory of gendered organizations: An abductive approach for feminist empirical research   pp. 1041-1064 Trudy BatesExploring the domestic division of labor when both parents are involuntarily working from home: The effects of the UK COVID pandemic   pp. 1065-1081 Reece GarciaEveryday racism and the denial of migrant African women’s good caring in aged care work   pp. 1082-1094 Temitope Olasunkanmi‐Alimi, Kristin Natalier and Monique MulhollandStigma, sustainability, and capitals: A case study on the menstrual cup   pp. 1095-1112 Lara OwenOrganizing male infertility: Masculinities and fertility treatment   pp. 1113-1131 Lucia Cervi and David KnightsExperiencing liminality: At the crossroads of neoliberal and gendered experiences   pp. 1132-1148 Vijayta DoshiMore than handmaids: Nursing, labor activism and feminism   pp. 1149-1163 Jessa Lingel, Rosemary Clark-Parsons and Kim BranciforteA new currency for paid care: Circles of reciprocity   pp. 1164-1177 Shiri Regev‐MessalemIntersectional identities and career progression in retail: The experiences of minority‐ethnic women   pp. 1178-1198 Juliet Elizabeth Kele, Catherine Cassell, Jacqueline Ford and Kathryn WatsonHeroism and/as injurious speech: Recognition, precarity, and inequality in health and social care work   pp. 1199-1218 Sophie Hales and Melissa TylerKrasas, J. Still a Mother: Noncustodial Mothers, Gendered Institutions, and Social Change New York: Cornell University Press. 2021, ix‐x, 228 pp., ISBN13: 9781501754296; hbk $125.00   pp. 1219-1222 Annie McGheeCaring about the unequal effects of the pandemic: What feminist theory, art, and activism can teach us   pp. 1224-1235 Emmanouela Mandalaki, Noortje  van Amsterdam, Ajnesh Prasad and Marianna FotakiA femin… manifesto: Academic ecologies of care and cure during a global health pandemic   pp. 1236-1258 Angelo Benozzo, Mirka Koro, Anani Vasquez, Mariia Vitrukh, Pietro Barbetta and Charlton LongThe “new normal” of academia in pandemic times: Resisting toxicity through care   pp. 1259-1271 Mie Plotnikof and Ea Høg UtoftIndignação and declaração corporal: Luta and artivism in Brazil during the times of the pandemic   pp. 1272-1292 Yuliya Shymko, Camilla Quental and Madeleine Navarro MenaFrom the nice work to the hard work: “Troubling” community‐based CareMongering during the COVID‐19 pandemic   pp. 1293-1313 Amy Kipp and Roberta HawkinsTread lightly: Liminality and Covid‐19 reflections   pp. 1314-1330 Liela A. JamjoomIn lockdown with my inner saboteur: A collaborative collage on self‐compassion   pp. 1331-1345 Ana Paula Lafaire, Aleksi Soini and Leni GrünbaumLocked up and down: Incarceration, care, and art in a pandemic   pp. 1346-1359 Anne‐marie Greene, Deborah Dean, Sarah Bartley and Caoimhe McAvincheyFeminism from the margins: How women are contesting the “othering” of Muslims through arts‐based resistance?   pp. 1360-1374 Ritesh Kumar and Rahul KambleRemote schooling during a pandemic: Visibly Muslim mothering and the entanglement of personal and political   pp. 1375-1385 Şeyma Özdemir“Intensity, anxiety … but also, hope?” Reflections on care, whiteness, and emotions by women of color during the virocene   pp. 1386-1403 Angie Mejia, Danniella Balangoy and Chandi Katoch Volume 29, issue 3, 2022
 
  Are we failing female and racialized academics? A Canadian national survey examining the impacts of the COVID‐19 pandemic on tenure and tenure‐track faculty   pp. 703-722 Jennifer C. Davis, Eric Ping Hung Li, Mary Stewart Butterfield, Gino A. DiLabio, Nithi Santhagunam and Barbara MarcolinFeminized anti‐Blackness in the professoriate   pp. 723-738 E AlexanderThe social relations of gold: How a gendered asset serves social reproduction and finance in Pakistan   pp. 739-757 Ghazal Mir ZulfiqarChoreographing social reproduction: Making personal protective equipment and gender during a neoliberal pandemic   pp. 758-777 Braden Leap, Kimberly Kelly and Marybeth C. StalpCorporeal generosity: Breastfeeding bodies and female‐dominated workplaces   pp. 778-799 Elaine Burns, Susanne Gannon, Heather Pierce and Sky Hugman“Women of ill repute”: Pariah femininities, retaliatory violence, and the negotiation of rebel identities among women bartenders   pp. 800-816 Emily H. StarrWomen who host: An intersectional critique of rentier capitalism on AirBnB   pp. 817-829 George Maier and Kate R. GilchristLabors of love: Work, labor, and care in dog–human relations   pp. 830-844 Erika CudworthInvolved fatherhood and the workplace context: A new theoretical approach   pp. 845-862 Jamie AtkinsonExploring the lived experiences of Singapore’s “opt‐out” mothers: Introducing “Professional Motherhood”   pp. 863-879 Ben Kerrane, Emma Banister and Hadi WijayaElite women coaches negotiating and resisting power in football   pp. 880-896 Annelies Knoppers, Donna  de Haan, Leanne Norman and Nicole LaVoiClose encounters: Migrant bodies, workplace, and intimate labor in Asia   pp. 897-905 Denise L. Spitzer, Theodora Lam, Kellynn Wee and Brenda S. A. YeohWorking intimacies: Migrant beer sellers, surveillance, and intimate labor in Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand   pp. 906-921 Denise L. Spitzer“God blessed me with employers who don't starve their helpers”: Food insecurity and dehumanization in domestic work   pp. 922-937 Julie Ham and Aaron Ceradoy“Let my hands be your hands”: Constructions of intimacy among Filipina migrants in the care of the elderly in Japan   pp. 938-952 Katrina NavalloPositional embodiment: How networks shape the lived experiences of the bodies of female sex workers in post‐socialist China   pp. 953-970 Yeon Jung Yu Volume 29, issue 2, 2022
 
  “A trade of one's own”: The role of social and cultural capital in the success of women in male‐dominated occupations   pp. 371-387 Donna Bridges, Larissa Bamberry, Elizabeth Wulff and Branka Krivokapic‐SkokoThe COVID‐19 pandemic: Narratives of informal women workers in Indian Punjab   pp. 388-407 Nadia Singh and Areet KaurFeminist resistance building in the Brazilian agroecology movement: A gender decoloniality study   pp. 408-426 Flávia Naves and Yuna FontouraGender‐based exclusionary practices in performance appraisal   pp. 427-442 Angel Ellul Fenech, Shireen Kanji and Zsuzsanna VarghaFeminism through the market? A study of gender‐equality consultants in France   pp. 443-465 Soline BlanchardRepoliticizing diversity work? Exploring the performative potentials of norm‐critical activism   pp. 466-485 Mie Plotnikof, Sara Louise Muhr, Lotte Holck and Sine Nørholm JustEgalitarian inequality: Gender equality and pattern bargaining   pp. 486-501 Ines Wagner and Mari Teigen(Not) bringing your whole self to work: The gendered experience of upward mobility in the UK Civil Service   pp. 502-519 Sam FriedmanThe production of difference and “becoming Black”: The experiences of female Nigerian doctors and nurses working in the National Health Service   pp. 520-535 Nkechinyelu Ann Edeh, Sarah Riley and Patrizia Kokot‐BlameyBattered South‐Asian diasporic women: Culture, secrets and work   pp. 536-560 Edwina Pio and Vikashni MooreWriting bodies and bodies of text: Thinking vulnerability through monsters   pp. 561-574 Line Henriksen, Katrine Meldgaard Kjær, Marie Blønd, Marisa Cohn, Baki Cakici, Rachel Douglas‐Jones, Pedro Ferreira, Viktoriya Feshak, Simy Kaur Gahoonia and Sunniva SandbuktEmbodying feminism: Donor demands and bridgework in Cambodian nongovernmental organizations   pp. 575-590 Mary‐Collier WilksAthena SWAN gender equality plans and the gendered impact of COVID‐19   pp. 591-608 Thereza Raquel Sales  de Aguiar, Shamima Haque and Keith BenderBrothers and broken dreams: Men, masculinity, and emotions in platform capitalism   pp. 609-625 Trang Thi Quynh Dinh and Janne TienariIf I knew then what I know now   pp. 626-638 Saoirse Caitlin O’SheaWomen deserve better: A discussion on COVID‐19 and the gendered organization in the new economy   pp. 639-649 Simisola JohnsonNegotiating masculinities in times of crisis: On the COVID frontline in Pakistan   pp. 650-665 Amna Chaudhry and John AmisWomen’s entrepreneurial subjectivity under scrutiny: Expert knowledge on gender and entrepreneurship   pp. 666-686 Amparo Serrano‐Pascual and Carlota Carretero‐GarcíaHow are gender inequalities (re)produced in France? A look at the roles of work, family, and school   pp. 687-692 Didier ChabanetSharing care: Equal and primary fathers and early years parenting   pp. 693-696 Mark GattoPower & consent by Rachel Doyle SC: Challenging the secrecy, blame & shame that occurs in cases of sexual harassment in Australian workplaces   pp. 697-702 Sarah Duffy and Michelle O’Shea Volume 29, issue 1, 2022
 
  Reproductive justice: Born transnational   pp. 1-7 Laura BriggsFertility treatment and organizational discourses of the non‐reproductive female body   pp. 8-27 Lucia Cervi and Joanna BrewisThe “diseased” activist's body as the site of trauma: Anti‐racist struggles and the postrace academy   pp. 28-43 Yasmin IbrahimThe woman writer's body: Multiplicity, neoliberalism, and feminist resistance   pp. 44-57 Sharon Ee Ling Quah and Alexandra Ridgway“Show us what you’ve got”: From experiences of undoing to mobilizing agentic vulnerability in research   pp. 58-78 Barbara Plester, Heesun Kim, Janet Sayers and Brigid CarrollVulnerable relational knowing that matters   pp. 79-91 Susan Meriläinen, Tarja Salmela and Anu ValtonenWhat is intersectional equality? A definition and goal of equality for organizations   pp. 92-109 Dorian R. Woods, Yvonne Benschop and Marieke  van den BrinkGender and ethnic equity in Aotearoa New Zealand's public service before and since Covid‐19: Toward intersectional inclusion?   pp. 110-130 Jane Parker, Janet Sayers, Amanda Young‐Hauser, Shirley Barnett, Patricia Loga and Selu PaeaIndigenous and gendered persons and peoples in business ethics education: Intersections of Indigenous wisdoms and de Beauvoirian existentialism   pp. 131-150 Shelley T. Price, Christopher M. Hartt, Albert J. Mills and Nia F. MacFarlane“Who else is gonna do it if we don't?” Gender, education, and the crisis of care in the 2018 West Virginia teachers' strike   pp. 151-166 Nancy Weiss Hanrahan and Sarah AmslerCritical feminist analysis of STEM mentoring programs: A meta‐synthesis of the existing literature   pp. 167-187 Makini Beck, Jillian Cadwell, Anne Kern, Ke Wu, Maniphone Dickerson and Melinda HowardAnd roses too: How “Better Work” facilitates gender empowerment in global supply chains   pp. 188-204 Kelly Pike and Beth EnglishChange agents or defending the status quo? How senior leaders frame workplace gender equality   pp. 205-221 Natasha Cortis, Meraiah Foley and Sue WilliamsonIdentity tensions of women with two leadership positions in India   pp. 222-240 Dina Banerjee and Nazia Zabin MemonGender and telework: Work and family experiences of teleworking professional, middle‐class, married women with children during the Covid‐19 pandemic in Turkey   pp. 241-255 Sevgi ÇobanThe emotional toll of postfeminist fatherhood   pp. 256-272 Julia Gruson‐Wood, Carla Rice, Jess Haines and Gwen E. Chapman“Isn't it ironic…!?!” Mobility researchers go sedentary: A group auto‐ethnography on collective coping and care in pandemic times   pp. 273-300 Kerstin Martel, Monique Raupp, Acil Abdul Hadi, Emilija Oleškevičiūtė, Rodrigo Mello, Tania Biswas and Giovanna S. MilaniPerceptions of gendered‐challenges in academia: How women academics see gender hierarchies as barriers to achievement   pp. 301-308 Hande Eslen‐Ziya and Tevfik Murat YildirimAcademic mothers, professional identity and COVID‐19: Feminist reflections on career cycles, progression and practice   pp. 309-341 Dorothea Bowyer, Milissa Deitz, Anne Jamison, Chloe E. Taylor, Erika Gyengesi, Jaime Ross, Hollie Hammond, Anita Eseosa Ogbeide and Tinashe DuneAcademic mothers with disabilities: Navigating academia and parenthood during COVID‐19   pp. 342-352 Kathryn Wagner, Summer Melody Pennell, Meike Eilert and Stacey R. LimFrom “nobody's clapping for us” to “bad moms”: COVID‐19 and the circle of childcare in Canada   pp. 353-367 Julia SmithGender: In World Perspective 4th Edition by Raewyn Connell—Book review by James Pickles   pp. 368-370 James Pickles |  |