Goodbye to a Historical Exclusion? The Journey of the Female Corporate Elite over a Century in Spain (1917–2017)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Cambridge University Press
Materia
corporate elite women on board corporate networks
Fecha
2024-11-07Referencia bibliográfica
Chirosa Cañavate, Luis, Josean Garrués-Irurzun, and Juan A. Rubio-Mondéjar. ”Enterprise & Society (2024): 1–29. [https://doi.org/10.1017/eso.2024.30]
Resumen
Recently, women’s presence on top boards of directors has significantly increased, challenging
the long standing of male-led corporate elites. In light of the still-developing literature, this article
provides a century-long examination of women’s entry into the Spanish corporate elite, offering
several original contributions. In addition to its pioneering input into the country’s historiography,
the work uses a holistic model to introduce a comparative European approach. Moreover, it
empirically examines the significant yet previously unexplored impact of elite training institutions
on the advancement of female directors as well as their arrival through a national holding
company and their presence in leading publicly traded companies. Findings showed four distinct
stages in their trajectory: discriminatory exclusion, during the first third of the twentieth century;
exceptional inclusion, with early positions in their family-owned firms; gradual incorporation,
with increased political representation and expanded academic access in the latter decades of
the last century; and promotion, supported by twenty-first-century political strategies, while still
revealing the handicap of women’s delayed entry into the corporate network.