- Management and Marketing - Research Publications
Management and Marketing - Research Publications
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ItemWhat works, what’s fair? Using systematic reviews to build the evidence base on strategies to increase gender equality in the public sectorSojo Monzon, V ; Ryan, M ; Fine, C ; Wheeler, M ; McGrath, M ; Roberts, V ; Arthur-Hulme, L ; Hadoux, R ; Western, K ; Sojo Monzon, V ( 2022-05-24)
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ItemHappier workers, healthier patients: An analysis of healthcare worker engagement and health service outcomes in VictoriaBell, S ; Garud, N ; Pati, R ; Sojo Monzon, V ; Healy, J ; Adamovic, M (Safer Care Victoria, Victorian Managed Insurance Authority., 2022-01-21)
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ItemThe ‘good, bad and merit’ arguments in Australian news coverage of workplace gender diversitySojo Monzon, V ; Fine, C ; Lawford-Smith, H ; Yang, Z ; Verspoor, C (The University of Melbourne and VicHealth, 2020-09-30)Research aims: In this study, we used the machine learning technique of topic modelling, as well as qualitative content analysis, on a large sample of articles published in high-circulation Australian printed media with the objectives to: 1. Explore the ways workplace gender diversity issues are discussed. 2. Identify the most common types of arguments for and against striving for greater workplace gender diversity. 3. Evaluate whether the year and month of publication, the type of diversity discussed and the sex of the author are related to the types of arguments for and against workplace gender diversity. Research contribution: Our findings indicate that the analysed articles were more likely to: • Focus on high-profile women (e.g., politicians, actors and influencers) and their life-styles, including trade-offs they had to make, rather than on discussions of the policies and practices organisations implement to manage workplace gender diversity, or on quantitative descriptions of the extent of gender inequality and lack of gender diversity. • Focus on discussions of sexism in the media industry and in particular high-profile workplace sexual harassment cases. • Present a narrow range of reasons for and against workplace gender diversity initiatives. • Focus on arguments in favour of increased workplace gender diversity when written by women (compared with men) and focus on risks to merit when written by men (compared with women).
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ItemRecruit Smarter - Technical ReportStratemeyer, M ; Sojo Monzon, V ; Wheeler, M ; Rozenblat, V ; Lee, I ; PETER, D ; Kociski, M ; McGrath, M ; Genat, A ; Wood, R (Victorian Government, 2018-10-10)Recruit Smarter trialled four pilot interventions across a range of government departments and private sector organisations. The four interventions included two trials of targeted recruitment via modified language use in job advertisements, a CV de-identification program, and the provision of training to address unconscious bias. The pilot program has found evidence that these interventions are beneficial to improving equity of opportunity for diverse Victorian applicants.
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ItemA Question of Ethics: Navigating Ethical Failure in the Banking and Financial Services IndustryWheeler, M ; Wood, R ; Sojo Monzon, V ; McGrath, M (Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand, 2016)Since the global financial crisis (GFC), financial institutions and practitioners in Australia, New Zealand and Asia have come under scrutiny for a range of ethical transgressions leading to industry scandal, as have their more well-known counterparts in the United States and United Kingdom. Some scandals were caused by people who – driven by greed and the demands of a complex, fast-paced industry – chose to behave unethically. However, evidence from social psychology points to an alternative explanation: a good deal of unethical behaviour is also unconscious. In A Question of Ethics, we draw on themes and findings from various industry scandals to examine contributing factors at the structural, social and individual levels that influence ethical conduct, and how these may be distorted by what social psychologists refer to as cognitive biases. We present data from a six-country survey of banking and financial services industry practitioners, which explores attitudes towards questionable practices and seeks views about the potential for ethical improvement.
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ItemResilience: Women's Fit, Functioning and Growth at Work: Indicators and PredictorsSOJO, V ; Wood, R (Melbourne Busine, 2012)
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ItemA review of the evidence regarding work-life policiesWood, R ; SOJO, V (Ormond, 2013)
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ItemTransition to Primary School: A Review of the LiteratureHirst, M ; Jervis, N ; Visagie, K ; SOJO, V ; Cavanagh, S (Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing, 2011)
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ItemDeveloping female leaders: Addressing gender bias in global mobilitySOJO, V (Price, 2015)