Sub-theme 64: The Impact of Organizational Practices on Individual Employment Outcomes: What Works?
Call for Papers
At the core of research in organization studies lays the fundamental premise that organizations play a key role in generating
and sustaining inequality in the workplace. For example, many studies show that women and racial minorities occupy lower quality
jobs, through processes of screening, hiring, promotion, and termination. Recent empirical work has found that gender and
racial disparities in the workplace remain even after the adoption of diversity programs, problem-solving team and job-training
arrangements, merit-based pay practices, and other work policies. Other studies have also examined how structural factors
internal to organizations, such as organizational size and tenure, hierarchical structure, and the use of job categories,
affect ascriptive inequality. In the end, the distribution of resources, power and opportunities in society cannot be fully
understood without paying attention to the impact of organizations and their practices on key individual work outcomes.
The purpose of this sub-theme is to bring together a group of researchers who share a concern for advancing
our knowledge about the impact of organizational practices on workplace inequality and diversity. In particular, our goal
is to discuss innovative research that sheds new light on surprising theoretical mechanisms that explain how organizational
practices affect key employment outcomes – such as assignment to jobs, wages, promotions, career advancement, training opportunities,
etc. Because the nature of organizations and their boundaries are changing so rapidly, talking about “organizational practices”
may not be the ideal way of thinking about these issues any more.
Thus, we also would like to explore the
blurring of organizational boundaries, values, and procedures, the recent patterns of employee mobility, the increasing use
of “market-driven” employment practices and the use of technology in the employment domain. Our goal is to examine how these
developments shape new forms of economic and social inequality. This topic is not only relevant for the advancement of organizational
theory and research, but it also has practical implications for employees, managers, communities, and society as a whole.
We are open to learning from multiple theoretical perspectives, ranging from purely structural or incentive-based
accounts of inequality to cognitive and identity-based perspectives on how differential opportunities and inequitable treatment
may emerge within organizations.
Some of the topics we would like to discuss include (but are not limited
to):
How do recruitment and hiring, training and development, as well as reward systems within traditional and non-traditional organizations affect individuals’ careers in the workplace?
How do emergent information and other types of technologies (such as online platforms, algorithms, machine learning, predictive analytics, etc.) shape screening, hiring, task/job allocation and hence individual workplace outcomes?
How do new organizational forms and employment arrangements (temporary and contingent work, intermediaries, network-based firms, etc.) influence the distribution of power in labor markets and in turn workplace inequality?
What are the (un)intended consequences of old and new organizational practices and routines, in particular as they advantage some individuals or groups while constraining opportunities for others inside and outside work organizations?
How can organizational practices be designed and implemented to mitigate workplace inequality and increase diversity?
We welcome a broad array of methodologies, from qualitative
or quantitative analysis to simulations and experimental approaches. We are also interested in studies across industries and
markets, as long as they share a concern for the role of organizational practices in understanding workplace inequality.
By learning from different theoretical and empirical approaches, we believe attendees to this sub-theme will
substantially enrich their particular research agendas within the broad topic of organizations, inequality, and diversity.