Work and Occupations

Why does sex segregation in professional occupations persist? Arguing that the cultures and practices of professional socialization serve to perpetuate this segregation, the authors examine the case of engineering. Using interview and diary entry data following students from college entry to graduation, the authors show how socialization leads women to develop less confidence that they will “fit” into the culture of engineering. The authors identify three processes that produce these cultural mismatches: orientation to engineering at college entry, initiation rituals in coursework and team projects, and anticipatory socialization during internships and summer jobs. Informal interactions with peers and everyday sexism in teams and internships are particularly salient building blocks of segregation.

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Vol 43, Issue 2, 2016

Recommended Citation


Persistence Is Cultural

Carroll Seron1, Susan S. Silbey2, Erin Cech3, Brian Rubineau4University of California Irvine, CA, USAMassachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USARice University, Houston, TX, USAMcGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada


Work and Occupations

Vol 43, Issue 2, pp. 178 - 214

First published date: December-16-2015


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Carroll Seron, Susan S. Silbey, Erin Cech, Brian Rubineau
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