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Flexibility trap – the effects of flexible working on the position of female professionals and managers within a corporate environment

Lenka Formánková (Department of Gender and Sociology, Institute of Sociology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic)
Alena Křížková (Department of Gender and Sociology, Institute of Sociology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic)

Gender in Management

ISSN: 1754-2413

Article publication date: 5 May 2015

3573

Abstract

Purpose

The aim of this paper is to analyse the experience of female part-time professionals with employee and managerial positions with the utilisation of flexible work arrangements in a corporate environment in the country with a full-time dominated work culture. The data represent a rare case study of the work environment in a Czech branch of one multinational company. This paper focusses on the position of female employees working part-time in professional and managerial positions. The reason for such an arrangement is their attempt to combine career and care for pre-school children. This paper evaluates the effects of flexible work policies in an environment where part-time work for female professionals is rarely available and, therefore, precious. In particular, this paper discusses conditions under which these arrangements are available and its impact on gender equality.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper represents a rare case-study of an organisational environment. The seven analysed interviews derive from a larger study on the corporate environment which included 35 interviews and a series of participatory observations. In the analysis, the following questions are discussed: What is the position of employees working within flexible working arrangements in a specific corporate culture? Which aspects of flexible working arrangements affect the professional recognition and evaluation of the employees? To what extent and how do flexible working arrangements affect employee satisfaction with their working and private lives?

Findings

The data reveal the diverse and often subtle forms of discrimination and exploitation of working mothers, who use the flexible working arrangement as a work-family reconciliation strategy. Female employees working with alternative working arrangements do not have equal bargaining power in comparison to other employees, regardless of whether they are professionals, and sometimes in managerial positions. At the formal level, the part-time professionals are restricted in pay and in access to the company benefits. In the informal relations within the workplace, their work lacks of sufficient recognition of colleagues and superiors. Overall, part-time work for female professionals and managers leads to an entrapment between the needs of their family and the expectations of their employer.

Practical implications

The research reveals the practical limitation in introducing policies the work-life reconciliation policies. The results show the need to focus on promoting better conditions for employees working part-time. Also, it shows that managerial and highly demanding professional positions can be executed on a part-time basis if the work environment is open towards accepting this arrangement. Moreover, the findings outline the possibilities of developing workplace practices in the Czech Republic in a woman-friendly direction.

Social implications

Specific legislative arrangements should be enacted, providing better protection for employees in non-standard employment. At the same time, the incentives for employers to enable part-time working arrangements should be provided.

Originality/value

The amount of research on female professionals working part-time or from home is rather limited in context of the post-communist countries. The paper discusses the “double” tokenism of the women working in the leadership positions and at the same time in flexible working arrangements in the full-time working culture.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This article was written as part of the research project “Changes in partnership and family forms and arrangements from the life course perspective” (grant no. P404/10/0021), funded by the Czech Science Foundation and with the support of long-term strategic development of research organisation RVO: 68378025. Both authors work at the Institute of Sociology AS CR, v.v.i. The authors would like to thank the anonymous reviewer for the valuable comments.

Citation

Formánková, L. and Křížková, A. (2015), "Flexibility trap – the effects of flexible working on the position of female professionals and managers within a corporate environment", Gender in Management, Vol. 30 No. 3, pp. 225-238. https://doi.org/10.1108/GM-03-2014-0027

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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