Berger, L., et al. (2015). "Practicing Gender When Networking: The Case of University-Industry Innovation Projects." Gender, Work & Organization 22(6): 556-578.
Format: Peer-reviewed article
Type: Research – experimental
Experience level of reader: Fundamental
Annotation: Networking within partnerships is a social activity influenced by social norms. Many studies regard networking as gender neutral and fail to account for significant influence of gender in their research. Other studies about disparity fail to explain the prevalence of gender norms in organizational practices or how they are reproduced in international university-industry collaborations. This study was conducted by direct observation of formal innovation meetings. The author took notes on social aspects of the meetings, tours, and social interactions including seating arrangements, who gave input, cracked jokes, interrupted others, etc. She held interviews with participants after the meetings. By examining international collaborations and factoring for local gender disparities, we gain insight into how these dynamics are mirrored within collaborations. Distinguishing gender practices from the practicing of gender better elucidates network dynamics. This study explores the performative aspects of gender roles in organizations, particularly male dominated networks. Author concludes these small instances create a self-sustaining system of gender inequality.
Setting(s) to which the reported activities/findings are relevant: Government, Large business, Small Business, University.
Knowledge user(s) to whom the piece of literature may be relevant: Brokers, Clinicians, Manufacturers, Policy makers, Researchers.
Knowledge user level addressed by the literature: Basic
This article uses the Commercial Devices and Services version of the NtK Model
Being cognizant of gender practicing (actions taken moment to moment) in context of gender practices (existing cultural norms) enables actors to reproduce or challenge unequal practices.
Study findings
Occurrences within model: NtK Step 4.6, 4.10
When assigning roles, be cognizant of who is expected to “pour the coffee” i.e. give tours, take notes, give up a seat at the table, make small talk, plan parties, and handle other such social or domestic office labor. Assign these tasks equally by job role and be mindful not to reproduce unequal gender practices.
Study findings
Occurrences within model: NtK Step 4.6, 4.10