"Hybrids" and the Gendering of Computing Jobs in Australia
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3127/ajis.v12i2.94Keywords:
QualIT, gender, Australia, job roles, survey, case studyAbstract
This paper presents recent Australian evidence on the extent to which women are entering “hybrid” computing jobs combining technical and communication or “people management” skills, and the way these skill combinations are valued at organisational level. We draw on a survey of detailed occupational roles in large IT firms to examine the representation of women in a range of jobs consistent with the notion of “hybrid”, and analyse the discourse around these sorts of skills in a set of organisational case studies. Our research shows a traditional picture of labour market segmentation, with limited representation of women in high status jobs, and their relatively greater prevalence in more routine areas of the industry. While our case studies highlight perceptions of the need for hybrid roles and assumptions about the suitability of women for such jobs, the ongoing masculinity of core development functions appears untouched by this discourse.Downloads
Published
2005-05-01
How to Cite
Whitehouse, G., & Diamond, C. (2005). "Hybrids" and the Gendering of Computing Jobs in Australia. Australasian Journal of Information Systems, 12(2). https://doi.org/10.3127/ajis.v12i2.94
Issue
Section
Selected Papers from the Qualitative Research in IT Conference (QUALIT)
License
AJIS publishes open-access articles distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Non-Commercial and Attribution License which permits non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and AJIS are credited. All other rights including granting permissions beyond those in the above license remain the property of the author(s).