ABSTRACT

In the 1990s, considerable changes in the political and social world have impacted on the character of both public and private organizations. At a time of increased uncertainty and insecurity in these organizations, new ways of managing and being managed have emerged. Recognising that organizational life is part reflective and determined by dominant social discourses, factors of gender will inevitably be central to the dynamics of organizational change. This book addresses theoretical ideas and mythologies in the examination of gendered organizations. The need to examine men in relation to family, law and society in general is growing, and this book extends this interrogation to work and organizational life. It will be of interest to students in management studies, public sector management and those involved in public policy making as well as students and academics within gender studies and sociology.

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

Locating personal and political transformations

part |105 pages

Women in the management arena

chapter |17 pages

The under-representation of women managers in higher education

Are there issues other than style?

chapter |15 pages

Rhetoric versus reality

Why women tend not to apply for senior positions in secondary education

chapter |18 pages

Power and resistance in the academy

The case of women academic managers

part |111 pages

Unmasking men and management

chapter |22 pages

Men, managers and management

The case of higher education

chapter |18 pages

A personal encounter

Exploring the masculinity of management through action research

chapter |16 pages

The organization of intimacy

Managerialism, masculinity and the masculine subject

chapter |14 pages

“Man” management

Ironies of modern management in an “old” university