ORGANIZATION OF INFORMATION AND THE DETECTION OF GENDER DISCRIMINATION |
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Authors: | Christel G Rutte Kristina A Diekmann Jeffrey T Polzer Faye J Crosby David M Messick |
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Affiliation: | University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands;J L Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Northwestern University |
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Abstract: | Abstract— This report examines several factors that influence the detection of gender discrimination in organizations We presented subjects with information about the qualifications and salaries of women and men in 10 departments of a hypothetical company The information was created so that one or the other gender was undercompensated relative to its qualifications Subjects rated the fairness of salaries and recalled the average qualifications of the women and men Ordinal inequity, which occurred when the gender with the better qualifications received a lower salary within a department, was easily detected Discrimination that did not violate ordinal equity within a department was more difficult to detect The results indicate that the way information is presented to subjects influences the processing of the information and the ease with which unfairness is perceived In addition, subjects judged the discrimination to be more unfair when women, rather than men, were disadvantaged |
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