THE INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT - IMPLICATIONS FOR RACE AND GENDER INEQUALITY IN THE US LABOR-MARKET

Authors
Citation
Jj. Beggs, THE INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT - IMPLICATIONS FOR RACE AND GENDER INEQUALITY IN THE US LABOR-MARKET, American sociological review, 60(4), 1995, pp. 612-633
Citations number
50
Categorie Soggetti
Sociology
ISSN journal
00031224
Volume
60
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
612 - 633
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-1224(1995)60:4<612:TIE-IF>2.0.ZU;2-L
Abstract
I link institutionalism in organizational theory with research on stra tification and document the effects of the institutional environment, a noneconomic variable, on economic inequality, Using multiple indicat ors, I create a scale measuring how much the social environment within a state endorses equality of opportunity. Using 1980 Census data, I t est whether industries with more of their employment in stares with en vironments less supportive of equality exhibit greater race/gender ine quality in earnings and in access to good (skilled white-collar) jobs. I find that the more egalitarian the institutional environment, the l ess the inequality between Black men or Black women and White men. Res ults on whether the stale institutional environment affects inequality between White women and White men are equivocal. Industries with stro nger ties to the national institutional environment are more favorable in terms of jobs and earnings for slack men, Black women, and White w omen, relative to White men. All analyses include controls for group d ifferences in human capital, hours worked, average establishment size, and whether the industry is in the core sector.