From gender policies and practices to organisational performance of sport governing bodies
Lesch L, Lachance EL, Kerwin S, Wicker P (2024)
European Sport Management Quarterly.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| E-Veröff. vor dem Druck | Englisch
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Autor*in
Lesch, LaraUniBi;
Lachance, E. L.;
Kerwin, S.;
Wicker, PamelaUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
Research question
Gender policies reflect identity-conscious human resource management structures that aim to reduce unfair treatment based on gender. Drawing on signalling theory and the categorisation-elaboration model, the literature suggests that the relationship between gender policies and organisational performance is moderated by several factors (gender practices, organisational culture, decision-making quality), which have not yet been empirically studied. The purpose of this study is to investigate the presence of gender policies in sport governing bodies (SGBs) and examine their relationship with organisational performance.
Research methods
An online questionnaire was sent to representatives of German SGBs (n = 202). Structural equation modelling was used to examine the relationships between gender policies, gender practices (i.e. board gender diversity), organisational culture, decision-making quality, and organisational performance.
Results and findings
Gender policies are rarely present in German SGBs, and can only shape the organisational culture when they are connected to daily routines (in contrast to the simple presence of a written statement). Gender policies and practices are positively associated with decision-making quality and organisational performance.
Implications
The findings contribute to the literature by shedding light on the theoretical mechanisms (i.e. organisational culture, decision-making quality) through which group diversity affects organisational performance. Sport managers should connect gender policies to the daily work instead of simply including them in good governance guidelines, especially because they also benefit the organisation in terms of better performance. Politicians should consider mandatory regulations to make gender policies more effective.
Erscheinungsjahr
2024
Zeitschriftentitel
European Sport Management Quarterly
ISSN
1618-4742
eISSN
1746-031X
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2992391
Zitieren
Lesch L, Lachance EL, Kerwin S, Wicker P. From gender policies and practices to organisational performance of sport governing bodies. European Sport Management Quarterly. 2024.
Lesch, L., Lachance, E. L., Kerwin, S., & Wicker, P. (2024). From gender policies and practices to organisational performance of sport governing bodies. European Sport Management Quarterly. https://doi.org/10.1080/16184742.2024.2404439
Lesch, Lara, Lachance, E. L., Kerwin, S., and Wicker, Pamela. 2024. “From gender policies and practices to organisational performance of sport governing bodies”. European Sport Management Quarterly.
Lesch, L., Lachance, E. L., Kerwin, S., and Wicker, P. (2024). From gender policies and practices to organisational performance of sport governing bodies. European Sport Management Quarterly.
Lesch, L., et al., 2024. From gender policies and practices to organisational performance of sport governing bodies. European Sport Management Quarterly.
L. Lesch, et al., “From gender policies and practices to organisational performance of sport governing bodies”, European Sport Management Quarterly, 2024.
Lesch, L., Lachance, E.L., Kerwin, S., Wicker, P.: From gender policies and practices to organisational performance of sport governing bodies. European Sport Management Quarterly. (2024).
Lesch, Lara, Lachance, E. L., Kerwin, S., and Wicker, Pamela. “From gender policies and practices to organisational performance of sport governing bodies”. European Sport Management Quarterly (2024).
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