Stretched Thin: How a Misalignment Between Allocation and Valuation Underlies the Paradox of Diversity Achievement in Higher Education
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Tian, Tanya Y.; Smith, Edward B.
署名单位:
New York University; Northwestern University; New York University; NYU Shanghai
刊物名称:
ADMINISTRATIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY
ISSN/ISSBN:
0001-8392
DOI:
10.1177/00018392241247744
发表日期:
2024
页码:
711-746
关键词:
AFFIRMATIVE-ACTION
Gender inequality
racial-inequality
public-sector
RACE
women
management
faculty
IMPACT
MODEL
摘要:
Racial inequality is remarkably resilient in organizational and labor market contexts despite efforts to resolve it, which raises significant questions about the mechanisms underlying its persistence. We argue that organizational efforts that increase the inclusion of underrepresented racial groups in the short term may conceal an emergent mechanism that paradoxically results in exclusion over time. The emergent mechanism stems from an acute misalignment between the scope of allocation in the matching process and the scope of valuation in the evaluation process, which ultimately increases voluntary and involuntary turnover among underrepresented racial groups. We examine this paradox through a revelatory case in higher education. Drawing on comprehensive administrative and research performance data from a large (R1) U.S. public university, we find that Black assistant professors are significantly more likely than their White colleagues to be allocated to non-standard positions, i.e., formally appointed in two academic departments with shared compensation. Our results demonstrate that such non-standard appointments are associated with a significant decline in research productivity, which remains central during the evaluation process. The end result is that jointly appointed assistant professors-among whom Blacks are disproportionately represented-experience lower likelihoods of retention.
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