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Queen Mary academic sheds light on cross-border hierarchy negotiations and gender gap in top professional service roles

The price of making it to the top is still frequently motherhood, indicating that flexible working and equal opportunity initiatives continue to fail in their purpose according to a new book by Queen Mary University of London, Senior Lecturer Dr Patrizia Kokot-Blamey

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Women’s access to the professions has improved remarkably over the past 20 years, and Professional Service Firms such as the Big-4 have invested heavily in Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion drives, with some, such as Deloitte, regularly featuring in Best Workplaces for Women rankings. But the number of women at the very top has failed to budge significantly over the same period with women making up just over 20-23% of partners in larger firms.

The new book ‘Gendered Hierarchies of Dependency’ by Dr Patrizia Kokot-Blamey analyses this stickiness at the top of a profession which plays a vital role in shaping decisions significant to the economy at large - auditing accounts, advising governments, navigating takeovers, and planning and executing restructuring and downsizing exercises.

Using a cross-national comparative lens, this new book queries whether a focus on performance, blind recruitment, and data-driven HR interventions has done anything but alienate people from one other. Dr Patrizia Kokot-Blamey explains: ‘We all spend so much time at work and, at the same time, work for many of us is no longer a place where we develop friendships or relationships of trust.  A shift away from relationship-based hiring has succeeded in getting more women through the door, but when we look at it comparatively, we can see that they are not as secure in their positions.’

At the same time, Kokot-Blamey finds that the price of making it to the top is still frequently motherhood, indicating that flexible working and equal opportunity initiatives continue to fail in their purpose. “There is nothing wrong with prioritising one’s career, but for many women giving up family life and motherhood in this way will be a cost too high to pay”, says Kokot-Blamey.

Praise for the book includes: “Drawing on a rich body of empirical material, Patrizia Kokot-Blamey offers a compelling comparative analysis of how women partners make sense of careers, sexism, motherhood, and job security in Germany and the UK. A thought-provoking book!” Elisabeth Kelan, University of Essex (author of ‘Men Stepping Forward: Leading Your Organisation on the Path to Inclusion). 

“Gendered Hierarchies of Dependency provides a stark reminder of the pressure employers place on workers even at high levels in organisations to comply with their conditions or else face redundancy and that, while there has been a profound change in women’s lifestyles, limitations remain, not so much from the fact that they care but that many men do not.” Diane Perrons, LSE (author of ‘Is Austerity Gendered?’)  

The book is available in hardback and ebook from publisher Oxford University Press.

A one-hour virtual lunch time book launch organised by the Centre for Research in Equality and Diversity, QMUL will take place on Thursday 7 September 2023 at 12-1pm. Here Dr Kokot-Blamey will be joined by Professor Elisabeth Kelan (University of Essex), Dr Katharina Luh (Partner with EY), and Professor Suki Sian (QMUL). Book your place on Eventbrite.

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