‘Black Boxes’ and ‘fracture points’: the regulation of gender equality in the UK and French construction industries
Contributor(s)
Lille - Economie et Management ( LEM )Université catholique de Lille ( UCL ) -Université de Lille-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique ( CNRS )
Keywords
construction industryUK
France
EU gender policy
gender equality
Europeanisation
JEL : M - Business Administration and Business Economics • Marketing • Accounting • Personnel Economics/M.M1 - Business Administration
JEL : M - Business Administration and Business Economics • Marketing • Accounting • Personnel Economics/M.M1 - Business Administration/M.M1.M14 - Corporate Culture • Diversity • Social Responsibility
[ SHS.GESTION ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration
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https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01463684Abstract
International audienceGender equality was a founding principle of the European Union (EU) and has remained on its policy agenda ever since, yet delivery of policy goals has been uneven across countries and economic sectors. We draw on theoretical and empirical literatures from human resource management and policy science to explore EU gender equality initiatives and their enactment within one sector which has seen virtually no improvements in gender-based employment equality: construction. To help understand the possible reasons for this, we compare practice and experiences in two countries; the UK and France. In both, the construction industry remains resolutely male-dominated, with women employed primarily in support and administrative roles. We deploy the concept of Europeanisation, to provide an analytical framework to understand the potential gaps between policy goals and on-the-ground implementation, whilst a comparative approach allows us to see if different national approaches to EU policy implementation can help explain these policy failures. We identify three potential ‘fracture points’ where breaks in policy transmission and enactment may occur: between the EU and national levels; between the national and industry levels; and within the industry itself. We identify areas for further research, where unpacking the ‘Black Boxes’ of policy development and industry practices, can help more effective policy-targeting to deliver policy goals on gender equality.
Date
2017-02-03Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleIdentifier
oai:HAL:hal-01463684v1hal-01463684
https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01463684
DOI : 10.1080/09585192.2016.1277366
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