Abstract
Persuaded by the observed positive link
between the flow of appropriately skilled and trained
female talent and female presence at the upper echelons of
management (Plitch, Dow Jones Newswire February 9,
2005), this study has examined current trends on
women's uptake of graduate and executive education
programs in the world's top 100 business schools and
explored the extent to which these business schools
promote female studentship and career advancement. It
contributes by providing pioneering research insight,
albeit at an exploratory level, into the emerging best
practice on this important aspect of business school
behavior, an area which is bound to become increasingly
appreciated as more global economic actors wise up to the
significant diseconomies inherent in the under-utilization
of female talent, particularly in the developing world.
Among the study's main findings are that female graduate
students averaged 30% in the sample business schools, a
figure not achieved by a majority of the elite schools,
including some of the highest ranked. Only 10% of these
business schools have a specialist center for developing
women business leaders, and only a third offered womenfocused
programs or executive education courses,
including flextime options. A higher, and increasing,
percentage of business schools, however, reported offering
fellowships, scholarships or bursaries to prospective
female students, and having affiliations with pro-women
external organizations and networks that typically facilitate
career-promoting on-campus events and activities.
The implications of the foregoing are discussed, replete
with a call on key stakeholder groups to more actively
embrace the challenge of improving the supply of
appropriately trained female talent, or top management
prospects. Future research ideas are also suggested.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 65-83 |
Number of pages | 19 |
Journal | Journal of Business Ethics |
Volume | 83 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Nov 2008 |
Keywords
- women
- female
- top management
- business schools
- globalization
- business education
- women networks