2008
DOI: 10.1007/s10551-007-9649-0
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The Expatriate Glass Ceiling: The Second Layer of Glass

Abstract: The corporate glass ceiling continues to be a challenge for many organizations. However, women executives may be facing a second pane of obstructionan expatriate glass ceiling -that prevents them from receiving the foreign management assignments and experience that is becoming increasing critical for promotion to upper management. The responsibility to break the expatriate glass ceiling lies with both female managers and the multinational corporations that utilize expatriates. In this paper, we propose pre-ass… Show more

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Cited by 93 publications
(114 citation statements)
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“…The female expatriate experience has been referred to as the second layer of glass and the "expatriate glass ceiling", and responsibility has been placed on both multinational organizations and female managers to break this second glass ceiling (Forster, 1999;Insch et al, 2008). First, multinational organizations need to recognize the value of diversification and fully integrate women as eligible, qualified individuals to fill overseas assignments.…”
Section: Female Expatriatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The female expatriate experience has been referred to as the second layer of glass and the "expatriate glass ceiling", and responsibility has been placed on both multinational organizations and female managers to break this second glass ceiling (Forster, 1999;Insch et al, 2008). First, multinational organizations need to recognize the value of diversification and fully integrate women as eligible, qualified individuals to fill overseas assignments.…”
Section: Female Expatriatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, multinational organizations need to recognize the value of diversification and fully integrate women as eligible, qualified individuals to fill overseas assignments. Second, without female representation, multinational organizations deprive themselves the benefits of increased diversity, and risk making poor economic decisions because their employees are too homogeneous (Insch et al, 2008). Third, females in lower-level management positions may perceive difficulty in achieving senior management positions, due to lack of international experience, and may self-eliminate from competition.…”
Section: Female Expatriatesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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