Abstract

As the under-representation of women in management positions continues to persist globally, little is known about the experiences of women in the healthcare sector in the context of the developing Middle Eastern nations. In an attempt to address this knowledge gap, the current study explores some of the barriers that hinder and the enablers that foster women's career advancement in the healthcare sector. To meet its objectives, the current study uses a relational approach that integrates the macro socio-cultural, meso-organisational, and micro-individual levels of analysis. Guided by institutional theory as a theoretical framework and social constructionism as a philosophical stance, the current study adopts a qualitative research methodology. It capitalizes on in-depth, semi-structured, face-to-face interviews with women managers in different occupational fields, across the managerial hierarchy in the healthcare sector in Lebanon. Snowballing and purposeful sampling procedures were used, and the interviews were analysed using thematic analysis, focusing on identifying new, emerging themes. The results of the study confirm the salience of discriminatory cultural values, gendered social roles and expectations in Middle Eastern societies, and illustrate their role as barriers hindering women's career advancement. The results also portray the spillover effect of societal expectations and cultural gender stereotypes into the organisational realm, resulting in widely experienced attitudinal and structural organisational barriers. This study also illustrates how the enablers that facilitate and promote women's career progression unfold amidst the interplay between the macro and meso factors, lending credence to the role of women's agency at the individual micro level. Amongst the toll of barriers, Middle Eastern women navigate the patriarchy of their cultures and the discrimination inherent in their organisations by using their agency and persistence as they construct and negotiate their careers in management. This study provides new knowledge on the status of Middle Eastern women in the healthcare sector, a sub-category of female employees that to date, is under-researched. It primarily highlights the role of agency in building women's careers. It also stresses the notion that the complexity of women's careers in the healthcare sector can be best understood using a relational approach that highlights the intersectionality between gender, agency, socio-cultural realities and organisational boundaries.

Highlights

  • As the under-representation of women in management positions continues to persist globally, little is known about the experiences of women in the healthcare sector in the context of the developing Middle Eastern nations

  • The current study focuses on addressing the following questions: What are the main barriers that women managers in the healthcare sector in Lebanon face? What are the enablers that facilitate the progress of women to and through the various managerial positions in the healthcare sector in Lebanon? To achieve its objectives, the current study draws on qualitative data from ten women managers in the healthcare sector

  • To the author’s best knowledge, this is the first study in the Middle East to focus on the experience of women managers in the healthcare sector

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Summary

Introduction

As the under-representation of women in management positions continues to persist globally, little is known about the experiences of women in the healthcare sector in the context of the developing Middle Eastern nations. Conclusion: This study provides new knowledge on the status of Middle Eastern women in the healthcare sector, a sub-category of female employees that to date, is under-researched It primarily highlights the role of agency in building women’s careers. Women healthcare executives earn significantly less than their male counterparts for doing comparable work, even after adjusting for differences in human capital, as reported by the American College of Healthcare Executives [6] It is in this context that the current study seeks to explore the barriers and the enablers that women in the healthcare sector in developing countries face, in the context of a Middle Eastern country, Lebanon. It is a step towards improving our understanding of the problems that working women in the economically developing non-Western nations face, as the plethora of seminal research remains predominantly

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