Pitesa, M and Pillutla, M (2019) Socioeconomic mobility and talent utilization of workers from poorer backgrounds: the overlooked importance of within-organization dynamics. Academy of Management Annals, 13 (2). pp. 737-769. ISSN 1941-6520
Abstract
Socioeconomic mobility, or the ability of individuals to improve their socioeconomic standing through merit-based contributions, is a fundamental ideal of modern societies. The key focus of societal efforts to ensure socioeconomic mobility has been on the provision of educational opportunities. We review evidence that even with the same education and job opportunities, being born into a poorer family undermines socioeconomic mobility due to processes occurring within organizations. The burden of poorer background might, ceteris paribus, be economically comparable to the gender gap. We argue that in the societal and scientific effort to promote socioeconomic mobility, the key context in which mobility is supposed to happen—organizations—as well as the key part of the life of people striving toward socioeconomic advancement—that as working adults—have been overlooked. We integrate the organizational literature pointing to key within-organizational processes impacting objective (socioeconomic) success with research, some emergent in organizational sciences and some disciplinary, on when, why, and how people from poorer backgrounds behave or are treated by others in the relevant situations. Integrating these literatures generates a novel and useful framework for identifying issues people born into poorer families face as employees, systematizes extant evidence and makes it more accessible to organizational scientists, and allows us to lay the agenda for future organizational scholarship
More Details
Item Type: | Article |
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Subject Areas: | Organisational Behaviour |
Date Deposited: | 06 Jun 2019 08:27 |
Date of first compliant deposit: | 28 May 2019 |
Subjects: |
Performance Status Organisational behaviour Prejudice |
Last Modified: | 03 Dec 2024 02:58 |
URI: | https://lbsresearch.london.edu/id/eprint/1135 |