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How can mentoring support women in a male-dominated workplace? A case study of the UK police force

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Author(s)
Jones, Jenni
Keywords
formal mentoring
UK Police
women
learning
confidence
empowerment

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/405827
Online Access
http://hdl.handle.net/2436/620334
http://wlv.openrepository.com/wlv/handle/2436/620334
Abstract
There is little academic research in relation to mentoring, learning and women, particularly in the male dominated organisational context of the UK Police. Currently, there is a Home Office drive to address inequality with the UK Police with a number of initiatives proposed including mentoring interventions, flexible working arrangements and positive action recruitment initiatives. The purpose of this study is to investigate what policewomen mentees and mentors perceive they are learning through formal mentoring over time and how this makes a difference for them in the workplace. This will provide insights into whether Government investment in formal mentoring is the right intervention to help create a more gender reflective, more equal workforce, in the Police. 
 This study takes a critical realist position and an interpretivist theoretical perspective investigating a single case study organisation. Key themes, spread across the four phases of the mentoring lifecycle were explored through 68 semi-structured interviews and four focus groups. Key findings have been uncovered in relation to learning outcomes for these police women, both as mentees and mentors. It was found that mentoring added value across all four learning domains (cognitive, skills, affective-related and social networks) and that the largest number of responses over time, were in relation to the affective-related domain, particularly building self-confidence. 
 These findings are significant as they demonstrate that formal mentoring programmes can support and empower women within the specific workplace of the UK Police. In conclusion, if women are being precluded from breaking the ‘glass labyrinth’ due to lack of knowledge, opportunity and networks to progress within this context, then mentoring could be part of this solution. If the masculine organisational culture is also creating prejudice and obstacles for women in the workplace (the ‘concrete floor’), then mentoring might be one way towards breaking down these barriers. Also, if all (or some) of these factors are contributing to women’s lower self-confidence levels and the ‘sticky floor’ syndrome, then again the findings suggest that mentoring may be part of the solution towards empowering women beyond their current role. 
 It is hoped that these insights will impact the emphasis put on the various Home Office recommendations and the initiatives offered by different Police forces. It is also hoped that these insights will have implications for other organisations who are considering investing in mentoring interventions, for similar groups or beyond.
Date
2017-01-10
Type
Article
Identifier
oai:wlv.openrepository.com:2436/620334
How can mentoring support women in a male-dominated workplace? A case study of the UK police force 2017, 3:16103 Palgrave Communications
2055-1045
10.1057/palcomms.2016.103
http://hdl.handle.net/2436/620334
http://wlv.openrepository.com/wlv/handle/2436/620334
Palgrave Communications, 3, Article number: 16103 (2017)
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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Ethics in Higher Education

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