Data from 947 Division I college coaches in the United States were use
d to examine three hypotheses concerning the impact of gender ratio on
the frequency of social interaction between women and men coaches. Th
ese hypotheses were based on (a) the structural perspective characteri
zed by the politics of optimism, (b) the institutional approach associ
ated with the politics of pessimism, and (c) the common consciousness
or subculture perspective represented by the politics of transcendence
. Most support was shown for the politics of pessimism, which contends
that an increase of women in a male-dominated occupation is associate
d with rising gender boundaries and sex segregation. Results are explo
red in the context of gendered homosociality.