Revolving Doors Reexamined: Occupational Sex Segregation over the Life Course
利用英国职业生涯历史数据,重新检验了职业性别隔离的“旋转门”理论,提出需区分女性主导与高度女性主导职业,发现弱版本旋转门理论更适用于前者,存在“贫民区效应”。
Scholars have argued that although occupational sex segregation is high in aggregate terms, women frequently move between sex-typical and sex-atypical occupations over the life course—hence the “revolving doors.” I reexamine the revolving doors thesis using career history data from Great Britain. I argue that the conventional boundaries for occupational sex types need revision, at least for Britain. Specifically, female-dominated occupations should be distinguished from heavily female-dominated occupations. I show that although the strong version of the revolving doors thesis (which rules out path dependence) does not apply to both “female” and “heavily female” occupations, a weak version describes the former better than it does the latter. This result points to a ghetto effect.