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1 – 1 of 1Ronald J. Burke, Mustafa Koyuncu, Parbudyal Singh, Nihat Alayoglu and Kadife Koyuncu
The purpose of this paper is to explore gender differences in the work and career experiences and psychological health of women and men in managerial and professional jobs in…
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to explore gender differences in the work and career experiences and psychological health of women and men in managerial and professional jobs in Turkey.
Design/methodology/approach
Data were collected for 94 men and 48 women in managerial and professional jobs in Turkey. Comparisons of women and men using one‐way ANOVA provided considerable support for the hypotheses.
Findings
Women and men were found to differ on many personal demographic and work situation characteristics: women were younger, less likely to be married or have children, were at lower organizational levels, worked fewer hours and earned less income. Women and men had similar levels of education, however. Women and men were similar on almost all work outcomes (e.g. job satisfaction, work engagement, intent to quit) and indicators of psychological health (e.g. exhaustion, life satisfaction). However, men worked significantly more hours than did women.
Originality/value
The research extends previous work by scholars using a sample from Turkey. It is not often that research of this nature utilizes samples from countries outside of North America, Europe and Australasia. Furthermore, unlike some published research, this study uses many instruments/measures, all with excellent psychometric properties.
Details