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Belle Rose Ragins University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee John M. Cornwell Loyola University-New Orleans

Pink Triangles: Antecedents and Consequences of Workplace Discrimination Against Gay and Lesbian Employees. Belle Rose Ragins University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee John M. Cornwell Loyola University-New Orleans. Background.

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Belle Rose Ragins University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee John M. Cornwell Loyola University-New Orleans

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  1. Pink Triangles:Antecedents and Consequences of Workplace Discrimination Against Gay and Lesbian Employees Belle Rose Ragins University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee John M. Cornwell Loyola University-New Orleans

  2. Background • Gay men and lesbians constitute between 4 - 17% of the workforce (Gonsiorek & Weinrich, 1991) • Workplace Discrimination Widespread • Between 25-66% of gay employees report sexual orientation discrimination (cf. review by: Croteau, 1996) • Legal to discriminate in most workplaces (NGLTF, 2000) • The Decision to Be Out at Work • Only 16-24% of gay employees completely out at work (Driscoll, Kelley & Fassinger, 1996; Schneider, 1987)

  3. Purpose of Study • Develop and test a multi-level model of heterosexism in the workplace: • Provide insight into the macro and micro level factors that contribute to reported workplace discrimination against gay employees. • Examine the job attitudes and organizational outcomes associated with discrimination. • Examine the relationship between disclosure and discrimination, and other variables in the model.

  4. Jones’ (1972) Model of Institutional Racism. Racism occurs at 3 levels: Individual: racial climate/composition of workgroup. Institutional: institutional policies that produce racist consequences. Societal/cultural: societal views of racial superiority. Model of Heterosexism in Workplace. Applied to heterosexism: Individual: work group composition; relational demography theory. Institutional:organizational policies and practices; organizational culture. Societal/cultural: protective legislation. Theoretical Foundation

  5. Protective Legislation Hyp. 3 Perceived Workplace Discrimination Job and Career Attitudes Hyp. 5a Hyp. 2 Organizational Policies & Practices Hyp. 4 Hyp. 5b Disclosure of Sexual Orientation Organizational Outcomes: Compensation Promotion Hyp. 1a & 1b Work Group Composition: Supervisor Coworkers Research Question #1 ANTECEDENTS MEDIATOR CONSEQUENCES Research Question #2 Hypothesized Relationships

  6. Hypotheses: Antecedents • #1a. Gay employees with gay supervisors will report less workplace discrimination than gay employees with heterosexual supervisors. • #1b. Gay employees with a greater proportion of gay coworkers will report less workplace discrimination than gay employees with workgroups that are primarily heterosexual. • #2. The greater the extent of supportive policies and practices in the organization, the less workplace discrimination will be reported by gay employees. • #3. Gay employees in organizations governed by protective legislation will report less workplace discrimination than gay employees in organizations lacking protective legislation. • Research Question #1: Which antecedent factor has the greatest impact on reports of workplace discrimination?

  7. Hypotheses: Out at WorkConsequences of Discrimination • Hypothesis #4: Gay employees will be more likely to conceal their sexual orientation when they have experienced or observed workplace discrimination. • Hypothesis #5a: Gay employees who report workplace discrimination will hold more negative job and career attitudes than employees who do not report discrimination. • Hypothesis #5b: Gay employees who report workplace discrimination will have less compensation and fewer promotions than employees who do not report discrimination. • Research Question #2: Does reported workplace discrimination mediate the relationship between antecedent variables and outcomes?

  8. Method • Stratified random sample of 2,919 members of 3 national gay rights organizations: • 1,488 sent to largest glbt civil rights org.; 681 national Hispanic-American glbt org; 750 national African-American glbt org. • 334 returned unanswered (283: undeliverable mail; 51: retired, unemployed, deceased). • 768 respondents (30% response rate) • Excluded self-employed, heterosexual, unemployed, employed by gay organizations. • Final sample 534 gay and lesbian respondents

  9. Sample • Gender: 168 lesbians; 363 gay men. • Race/Ethnicity (69% white) • Euro-American: n= 361 African-American: n = 81 • Hispanic-American: n=65 Asian-American: n = 4 • Multiracial n = 6 (11 did not report race). • 92.9% gay/lesbian; 7.1% bisexual. • Average age: 41 yrs. • Education: B.A. (38%), M.A. (28%), Ph.D. (18%). • Primary Job Classifications: Professional/Technical (68%); Managerial (20%). Main Industries: Education (24%), Health (17%), Government (15%), Service (12%).

  10. Antecedent Measures • Protective Legislation • Respondents asked city and state of employer. • 69% in protective locales; 30% in locales lacking protection. • Organizational Policies and Practices(sum 6 items; alpha=.82) • Written Non-Discrimination Policy (54% yes; 29% no; rest: don’t know) • Include Sexual Orientation in Definition of Diversity (51% yes; 31% no) • Include Sexual Orientation in Diversity Training (31% yes; 46% no) • Offer Same-Sex Domestic Partner Benefits (20% yes; 70% no) • Offer GLBT Resource/Support Groups (22% yes; 67% no) • Welcome Same-Sex Partners at Comp. Social Events (52% yes; 19% no). • Work Group Composition • Sexual Orientation of Coworkers (89% mostly heterosexual; 6% balanced; 2% mostly gay; 2% did not know) • Sexual Orientation of Supervisor (86% straight supervisor; 9% gay supervisor; 5% did not know)

  11. Discrimination and Disclosure • Workplace Discrimination • Modified version of James, Lovato & Cropanzano (1994) Workplace Prejudice/Discrimination Inventory • Established reliability and validity (James, Lovato & Cropanzano, 1994) • 15 item single-factor instrument • Alpha = .94 • Disclosure(modified Croteau & Lark, 1995 & Levine & Leonard, 1984) • At work, have you disclosed your sexual orientation to: • No one (11.7%) • Some people (37%) • Most people (24.6%) • Everyone (26.7%)

  12. Attitudes and Outcome Variables • Established Measures of 6 Job Attitudes (alphas: .77-.91): • Job Satisfaction(Quinn & Staines, 1979) • Satisfaction with Opportunities for Promotion(Smith, Kendall & Hulin, 1969) • Organizational Commitment(Mowday, Steers & Porter, 1979) • Organization-Based Self-Esteem(Pierce et al, 1989) • Career Commitment(Blau, 1985) • Turnover Intentions(Nadler et al, 1975) • Career Outcomes • Promotion Rate (# of promotions over past 10 yrs.) • Compensation

  13. RESULTS: Antecedents • All 3 antecedent variables significantly related to reported workplace discrimination. • Gay employees reported less discrimination with: • Gay supervisors (r =-.16, p < .001) (Hypothesis 1a) • Greater proportion of gay coworkers (r =-.27, p < .001) (H1b) • Gay friendly organizational policies/practices (r =-.28, p < .001) (Hypothesis 2) • Strongest item: partner welcome at social events (r= -.60) • Protective legislation (r =-.14, p = .001) (Hypothesis 3) • Research Question #1: Which variable had greatest impact?

  14. Results of EQS Analyses:Policies and Practices Had Strongest Impact (Research Q 1)Greater disclosure with less perceived discrimination (H4) Protective Legislation -.096 .100 Perceived Workplace Discrimination Organizational Policies & Practices -.260 -.197 .326 Exogenous Variables Endogenous Variables Coworkers Orientation -.145 Hyp. 4 .180 -.043( N.S.) Disclosure of Sexual Orientation Supervisor Orientation -.070 (N.S.) Chi Square non-significant = 1.78 (2), p = .410 Goodness of fit indices greater than .99 Standardized residuals less than .065 All coefficients significant (alpha = .05)

  15. Post Hoc Analyses of Policies and Procedures Items • Gay employees report less discrimination and are more likely to be out in organizations that: (all p<.001) • Welcome same-sex partners at company social events*** • Have a non-discrimination policy • Include sexual orientation in definitions of diversity • Offer same-sex domestic partner benefits • Inclusion of gay issues in diversity training unrelated to discrimination or disclosure. • Gay support groups marginally related to discrimination (p=.05), but significantly related to disclosure (p=.007).

  16. Results: Outcomes of Discrimination • Gay employees who experienced or witnessed discrimination had more negative job and career attitudes than those who did not (Strong support for Hypothesis 5a) • Reports of workplace discrimination significantly related to all 6 attitudinal variables (r’s range: -.24 to -.47, all sign. p<.001) • Gay employees who experienced or witnessed discrimination had lower promotion rates(r= -.21, p<.001) than those who did not, but no differences in compensation (r =-.01, ns).(Partial support for Hypothesis 5b.)

  17. Research Question # 2: • Does workplace discrimination mediate the relationship between antecedents and outcomes? • Test: Chi-Square Difference Test between 2 EQS analyses: • Model #1: Workplace discrimination as mediator • Workplace discrimination did mediate relationships: All path coefficients were significant(except: discrimination and compensation) • Model #2: Added direct effects between antecedents and outcomes • Direct effects improved on model.Difference test: chi square=64.67 (34) p<.01) • Workplace discrimination mediated relationship between antecedents and outcomes but did not do so completely. • Legislation influenced outcomes through discrimination, • But organizational policies and practices had both a direct and indirect effect on attitudes and compensation. • Gay employees’ compensation and half of attitudes studied were directly improved by supportive policies and practices.

  18. Trimmed Model with Mediated and Direct Effects Turnover Intentions .246 -.670 -.067 Organizational Commitment .109 .687 -.455 Protective Legislation Career Commitment -.096 .090 .100 .511 -.220 Organizational Policies & Practices Organizational Self-Esteem -.436 Perceived Workplace Discrimination .450 -.262 Latent Common Variance .325 -.215 -.417 -.142 Job Satisfaction .715 Coworkers Orientation -.400 .457 -.119 Opportunities For Promotion .147 Supervisor Orientation -.244 .137 .152 Promotion Rate Disclosure of Sexual Orientation .170 Compensation

  19. Conclusion • Gay friendly organizational policies and practices had the strongest impact on discrimination and outcomes. • Greater impact than protective legislation. • Legislation important but not sufficient • Greater impact than whether supervisor or coworkers were gay. • Gay work group may buffer employee but not take the place of supportive organizational culture. • Independent effect on compensation and attitudes • Cultures that value diversity not only reduce discrimination, but also have a direct and independent effect on attitudes and outcomes. • Key indicator of gay friendly cultures: welcome the partner! • not “don’t ask/don’t tell” • BUT! Policies and practices built on culture; instituting policies without culture can result in backlash.

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