当女性团结一致:破坏性事件后的网络动态与共享资源

When Women Stick Together: Network Dynamics and Shared Resources Following Disruptive Events

ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2026
被引 1 · 同刊同年前 10%
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究了并购等破坏性事件如何改变医生转诊网络中的性别同质性,发现女性更倾向于维持女性间的强关系,从而获得更丰富的资源,缓解组织冲击带来的不利影响。

Abstract

Social networks play a role in exacerbating or ameliorating inequality. The persistence of network-based inequality is well documented. However, the mechanisms that disrupt this unequal access to resources remain poorly understood. This study investigates how structurally disruptive events, such as mergers and acquisitions (M&As), reshape gender homophily and resource sharing in networks. We examine how 59 M&As shape the evolution of 82,064 physicians’ referral and patient-sharing networks. We find that disruptive events enhance women’s access to resources by altering gender-homophily dynamics in formation, and maintenance. Specifically, acquisitions intensify men’s tendency to form ties with other men. In contrast, women are more likely to preserve ties with other women, with all-women dyads exhibiting greater resilience and higher maintenance rates than mixed-gender or all-men dyads. This dynamic results in richer networks for women, shielding them from the adverse effects of organizational disruption. These results highlight contrasting network behaviors following disruption: women winnow their networks, reinforcing stable, trust-based relationships with women, while men widen theirs, forming new distant ties with men. By demonstrating how gendered network dynamics evolve in response to disruptions, this study contributes to scholarship on gender inequality, network resilience, and conditions under which homophilous ties can mitigate disparities.

性别不平等社会网络组织行为网络韧性