阶级优势,承诺惩罚

Class Advantage, Commitment Penalty

American Sociological Review · 2016
被引 350
FT 50ABS 4★

中文导读

通过简历审计实验,研究美国大型律所招聘中社会阶级背景对求职结果的影响,发现高阶级男性获得更多面试机会,而高阶级女性因被认为缺乏职业承诺而失去优势。

Abstract

Research on the mechanisms that reproduce social class advantages in the United States focuses primarily on formal schooling and pays less attention to social class discrimination in labor markets. We conducted a résumé audit study to examine the effect of social class signals on entry into large U.S. law firms. We sent applications from fictitious students at selective but non-elite law schools to 316 law firm offices in 14 cities, randomly assigning signals of social class background and gender to otherwise identical résumés. Higher-class male applicants received significantly more callbacks than did higher-class women, lower-class women, and lower-class men. A survey experiment and interviews with lawyers at large firms suggest that, relative to lower-class applicants, higher-class candidates are seen as better fits with the elite culture and clientele of large law firms. But, although higher-class men receive a corresponding overall boost in evaluations, higher-class women do not, because they face a competing, negative stereotype that portrays them as less committed to full-time, intensive careers. This commitment penalty faced by higher-class women offsets class-based advantages these applicants may receive in evaluations. Consequently, signals of higher-class origin provide an advantage for men but not for women in this elite labor market.

劳动经济学社会分层性别歧视精英职业市场