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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Women and Leadership in the Creative Industries
Sun Nov 05 19:08:39 GMT 2023
Call for Papers: Women and Leadership in the Creative Industries
An interdisciplinary symposium at Bournemouth University, UK. 12th-13th
September 2024
Leadership and Management in the Creative Industries has been a matter
of some concern in recent years. In the UK, a succession of challenges
from Covid to economic slow-down and from high-profile instances of
bullying to a quiet leeching away of talent (especially diverse and
experienced talent) from these industries has raised awareness of the
need for leadership that is robust, creative and compassionate.
Diversity remains a concern across the creative and cultural sectors,
but most particularly in the critical area of leadership – where,
notwithstanding the predominantly female profile of new entrants in many
industry roles, women remain woefully under-represented in leadership
positions. In July 2023, Variety reported a raft of women, and
particularly women of colour, exiting leadership positions in the UK
(Ravindran 2023), as well as in Hollywood (Davis 2023), while in
September The Media Leader critiqued the gender ageism that, it claimed,
is ‘killing women’s careers’ and thus depriving the UK industries of
both leadership and innovation. (Kemp, 2023). The UK and US media are
not unique in this respect, with similar concerns being raised in recent
years across creative industries, and in countries as diverse as New
Zealand (Molloy and Larner, 2013), Catalonia (Barrios & Villarroya,
2022) and Malaysia (Kamalul Ariffin & Ibrahim, 2022). This symposium
will address women’s leadership in the creative industries, taking into
account the very broad definition of the term in an industrial ecosystem
characterised by its dependence on freelance workers and
micro-businesses alongside more traditional institutions. Its scope will
encompass routes into leadership and associated barriers as well as
concepts of creative entrepreneurial, as well as institutional
leadership. The symposium will adopt an inclusive perspective on
‘leadership’ recognising that this is not limited to hierarchical role
(Dodd, 2012) but is subject to many definitions. The organisers are also
interested in the experiences of women who do not yet identify as
‘leaders’ but who form part of an emerging pipeline, negotiating
barriers along the way.
Research into women in leadership positions across the wider economy has
highlighted several factors that appear to disrupt the careers and
prospects of female leaders, contributing to vertical as well as
hierarchical segregation. Acker’s (1990, 1998) work has been widely used
to explore how organisations in themselves are gendered with systems and
practices that favour an ideal worker as ‘unencumbered with caring
responsibilities and ready to devote his life to the job’ (Acker, 2006,
p. 69). The gendered nature of organisations is built upon processes
which allocate resources along various lines of inequality. Such ideal
worker prototypes can be exacerbated within creative industries which is
characterised by casualised labour, creating increased competition for
scarce resources (Scharff, 2016), and unsocial working hours (Banks &
Milestone, 2011). Furthermore, progression within the creative
industries relies on relevant social capital and networking practices
which disadvantage women (Gill, 2002; Eikhof & Warhurst, 2013). Such
contextual factors form part of the systemic barriers to advancing
women’s careers within the creative industries: an area which requires
further analysis. Turning from the organisational context to the
experiences of women traversing these barriers, while the ‘glass
ceiling’ has most decidedly cracked since Marilyn Loden coined the
phrase over 40 years ago, female leaders continue to be faced by
additional challenges compared with their male peers. Eagly and Carli’s
notion of the ‘leadership labyrinth (2007) and the perils of the ‘glass
cliff’ as described by Ryan et al (2007) outline some of the particular
obstacles encountered by women aspiring to or attaining leadership
positions. These include receiving more limited opportunities, compared
to their male counterparts, as well as negotiating career breaks and
caring responsibilities. Indeed, the impact of the motherhood penalty,
in particular, on women’s careers has recently been highlighted by the
Nobel prize-winning work of the economist Claudia Goldin. (Elsesser
2023). Notwithstanding the socially progressive values so often
espoused, or at least projected, by the creative industries, employment
conditions and hiring decisions are frequently regressive – chiefly as a
result of a lack of regulation, a notable informality in business
relationships, and a tendency to uncritically lionise the ‘creative
genius’ which is often seen as driving both reputation and profit in
creative organisations. Leadership, moreover, often manifests in
different, more flexible ways than more formally hierarchical working
environments, with creative leadership and organisational leadership not
necessarily aligned. Given these conditions, the creative industries
present some very particular opportunities and challenges for female
leaders, besides a nuanced perspective on those encountered more
generally across the wider economy. This symposium is designed to bring
together from a range of disciplines including, but not limited to,
media industries and production studies, business and management
studies, organisational psychology and sociology. It is our hope that by
sharing diverse perspectives on women and leadership in the creative
industries, participants will make new discoveries, form new,
interdisciplinary alliances and open up this under-explored topic to a
wider audience – including stakeholders in the industries themselves.
With these aims in mind, the organisers propose a special issue in a
relevant journal showcasing the work of contributors. Topics may
include, but are not limited to:
- Women in the leadership ‘pipeline’ – development, retention and
‘resilience’.
- The myth of meritocracy and how women’s progress is impacted by
divergent standards and opportunities.
- Sexism, sexual harassment and psychic safety. - Specialisation and
stereotyping: are women taking the ‘right’ roles? - The operation of the
motherhood penalty and career breaks on the leadership pipeline.
- Work/life balance and the retention of mid-career women.
- The ‘glass ceiling’ as limiting internal narrative and external obstacle.
- Intersectionality, with particular emphasis on the experiences of
o women of colour, o women with disabilities,
o older women,
o LGBTQ and trans women,
o Working-class women.
- The impact of social capital and networks on women’s careers.
- The impact of the concept of the ‘ideal worker’ within creative
industries.
- Management and leadership training: availability, efficacy, impact.
- The operation of the ‘glass cliff’ and how women might avoid it.
- Women and ‘creative leadership’.
This symposium is organised by: - Christa van Raalte, Associate
Professor of Film and Television, Bournemouth University; Melanie Gray,
Dean of the School of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, Roehampton
University; - Parisa Gilani, Principal Academic in Leadership,
Bournemouth University; Melissa Carr, Lecturer in International Human
Resource Management, Henley Business School, University of Reading.
It will be an in-person event at Bournemouth University, UK on Thursday
12th and Friday 13th September 2024, however there will be an
opportunity to present remotely at an online pre-symposium panel on
September 10th. Please indicate in your submission if you would prefer
to present online
Please submit a 400-500 words abstract, accompanied by a biography of up
to 150 words here by midnight GMT on January 29, 2024. We aim to
communicate decisions by March 1st, 2024. Further details of the
conference will be confirmed shortly but in the meantime we can confirm
that delegate fees will be £75 inclusive of catering (£50 for RGRs and
independent scholars; £25 for online delegates). For further information
contact Christa van Raalte at (cvanraalte /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)
Bibliography Acker, Joan. "Inequality regimes: Gender, class, and race
in organizations." Gender & society 20, no. 4 (2006): 441-464.
Banks, Mark, and Katie Milestone. "Individualization, gender and
cultural work." Gender, Work & Organization 18, no. 1 (2011): 73-89.
Barrios, Maite, and Anna Villarroya. "What is needed to promote gender
equality in the cultural sector? Responses from cultural professionals
in Catalonia." European journal of cultural studies 25.4 (2022): 973-992.
Davis, Clayton. “Black Women Executives Are Exiting Studio Leadership
Posts and Hollywood’s Doing Nothing About It.” Variety, July 5, 2023
Dodd, Fiona. "Women leaders in the creative industries: a baseline
study." International Journal of Gender and Entrepreneurship 4, no. 2
(2012): 153-178.
Eagly, Alice Hendrickson, and Linda Lorene Carli. Through the labyrinth:
The truth about how women become leaders. Harvard Business Press, 2007.
Eikhof, Doris Ruth, and Chris Warhurst. "The promised land? Why social
inequalities are systemic in the creative industries." Employee
relations 35, no. 5 (2013): 495-508.
Elsesser, Kim. “Claudia Goldin Wins Nobel Prize In Economics For
Studying Women At Work.” Forbes, 9 October 2023.
Gill, Rosalind. "Cool, creative and egalitarian? Exploring gender in
project-based new media work in Euro." Information, communication &
society 5, no. 1 (2002): 70-89.
Kamalul Ariffin, Kartini, and Faridah Ibrahim. "Contributing factors
towards women’s leadership in Malaysia creative industry: preliminary
findings." In Forum Komunikasi, vol. 17, no. 1, pp. 70-86. Faculty of
Communication and Media Studies (FCMS), 2022.
Kemp, Nicola. “Addressing media’s missing middle.” The Media leader,
September 12, 2023.
Loden, Marilyn. "Recognizing women's potential: No longer business as
usual." Management review 76, no. 12 (1987): 44.
Molloy, Maureen, and Wendy Larner. Fashioning globalisation: New Zealand
design, working women and the cultural economy. Chichester: John Wiley &
Sons, 2013.
Ravindran, Manori. “BBC Creative Diversity Head Joanna Abeyie to Exit.”
Variety, July 3, 2023
Ryan, Michelle K., S. Alexander Haslam, Mette D. Hersby, Clara Kulich,
and Cate Atkins. "Opting out or pushed off the edge? The glass cliff and
the precariousness of women's leadership positions." Social and
Personality Psychology Compass 1, no. 1 (2007): 266-279.
Scharff, Christina. "The psychic life of neoliberalism: Mapping the
contours of entrepreneurial subjectivity." Theory, culture & society 33,
no. 6 (2016): 107-122.
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