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Axes and fluidity of oppression in the workplace: Intersectionality of race, gender, and sexuality

By: Luiz, John M. and Terziev,Viktor.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Organization Description: 31(2), Mar, 2024: p.295-315.Subject(s): South African context LGBT mid-level managers Workplace experiences Axes of oppression Heteronormativity Homophobia Race/Racism Gender/Sexism Intersectionality Identity work Institutionalized processes Continuums of advantage and disadvantage Historically embedded modes of oppression Institutional and organizational practices Systems of oppression Micro, meso, and macro levels Intersecting identities In: OrganizationSummary: Our research explores how the historically institutionalized and authoritarian discriminatory South African context continues to affect the experiences of LGBT mid-level managers in the workplace. South Africa provides a rich environment to explore “axes of oppression” (heteronormativity/homophobia, race/racism, gender/sexism), and how these manifest and impact on participants’ work experience. Bringing together intersectionality as an analytical strategy with identity work allows us to examine the interaction between identities and the institutionalized processes by which they are shaped. Our findings show a multifaceted fluidity of oppression where individuals can move between continuums of advantage and disadvantage. We demonstrate the importance of historically embedded modes of oppression within the theory of intersectionality and how this manifests in institutional and organizational practices. As a result, organizations, institutions, and individuals play a role in reproducing inequality through intricate systems of oppression at micro, meso, and macro levels. This affects how individuals draw on their intersecting identities to respond to and decipher encounters with others.- Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/13505084221098252
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
31(2), Mar, 2024: p.295-315 Available AR131378

Our research explores how the historically institutionalized and authoritarian discriminatory South African context continues to affect the experiences of LGBT mid-level managers in the workplace. South Africa provides a rich environment to explore “axes of oppression” (heteronormativity/homophobia, race/racism, gender/sexism), and how these manifest and impact on participants’ work experience. Bringing together intersectionality as an analytical strategy with identity work allows us to examine the interaction between identities and the institutionalized processes by which they are shaped. Our findings show a multifaceted fluidity of oppression where individuals can move between continuums of advantage and disadvantage. We demonstrate the importance of historically embedded modes of oppression within the theory of intersectionality and how this manifests in institutional and organizational practices. As a result, organizations, institutions, and individuals play a role in reproducing inequality through intricate systems of oppression at micro, meso, and macro levels. This affects how individuals draw on their intersecting identities to respond to and decipher encounters with others.- Reproduced

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/13505084221098252

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