Invisible or Clichéd: How Are Women Represented in Business Cases?

Author:

Sharen Colleen M.1ORCID,McGowan Rosemary A.2

Affiliation:

1. Brescia University College, London, Ontario, Canada

2. Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Women represent just less than 50% of undergraduate business graduates and 36% of MBA graduates. Despite their strong presence in management education programs, women are noticeably absent from business case studies—a key pedagogical tool for instruction within management education programs worldwide. While case studies inform students about business processes, decision making, strategy, and leadership and management challenges, they also promote unintentional learning about gender. We argue that case studies contain a “hidden curriculum” that presents and reinforces implicit assumptions and stereotypes about women’s fitness to lead. Using NVivo 11 software to analyze the content of written cases, we examine the presence, absence, and representation of female and male protagonists in a sample of business cases published by a large business school case publisher. The findings offer comparative insights into the proportion of cases featuring female protagonists, the representation of women and men in leadership roles, and the characterizations of the female and male protagonists. Women protagonists were absent in more than 80% of cases, and when present, were portrayed as less visionary, risk taking, agentic, certain, and more emotional, cautious, and quality and detail oriented than men.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Business, Management and Accounting,Education

Reference198 articles.

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2. Gender in the Journal of Management Education: A Discussion of Content, Change, and Whether Any of these Contributions Matter;Journal of Management Education;2024-05-17

3. Women’s entrepreneurship education: a systematic review and future agenda;Journal of Management History;2024-03-22

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