Assimilation, Choice, or Constraint? Testing Theories of Gender Differences in the Careers of Lawyers

Using data on lawyers in Chicago, we test competing hypotheses derived from three broad theoretical models ofgender differences in professional careers: assimilation, choice, and constraint. Men and women begin their careers in different practice contexts and the differences grow over time. The magnitude of these persistent differences argues against an assimilationist view. Some of the divergence in career paths appears attributable to individual choices and preferences, but these do notfully accountfor the observed gender differences. Human-capital endowments are significant predictors of career positions but also fail to explain the observed gender differences. Women's overrepresentation in less prestigious and less remunerative settings and their underrepresentation in law-firm partnerships suggest that constraints continue to affect women's professional career opportunities.

[1]  R. Nelson,et al.  Partners with Power: Social Transformation of the Large Law Firm , 1988 .

[2]  Carrie J. Menkel-Meadow,et al.  RESOURCE ALLOCATION IN LEGAL SERVICES: Individual Attorney Decisions in Work Priorities , 1983 .

[3]  Richard Alba,et al.  Rethinking Assimilation Theory for a New Era of Immigration 1 , 1997, The International migration review.

[4]  Lisa E. Cohen,et al.  And then there were more ? The effect of organizational sex composition on the hiring and promotion of managers , 1998 .

[5]  Virginia Valian Why so slow? : the advancement of women , 1998 .

[6]  Solomon W. Polachek,et al.  Family Investments in Human Capital: Earnings of Women , 1974, Journal of Political Economy.

[7]  Ann M. Morrison,et al.  Women and minorities in management. , 1990 .

[8]  Faye J. Crosby,et al.  Relative deprivation and working women , 1982 .

[9]  Mary Blair-Loy Career Patterns of Executive Women in Finance: An Optimal Matching Analysis1 , 1999, American Journal of Sociology.

[10]  Gary S. Becker,et al.  The Economics of Discrimination. , 1972 .

[11]  R. Rumbaut Assimilation and its Discontents: Between Rhetoric and Reality 1 , 1997, The International migration review.

[12]  Karen Berger Morello The Invisible Bar: The Woman Lawyer in America, 1638 to the Present , 1986 .

[13]  Gerald Jacobs,et al.  Revolving Doors: Sex Segregation and Women''s Careers. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press , 1989 .

[14]  J. Lorber Women Physicians: Careers, Status and Power , 1984 .

[15]  J. Pfeffer,et al.  The Effect of the Proportion of Women on Salaries: The Case of College Administrators. , 1987 .

[16]  D. Aigner,et al.  Statistical Theories of Discrimination in Labor Markets , 1977 .

[17]  Fiona M. Kay Flight from law : A competing risks model of departures from law firms , 1997 .

[18]  Fiona M. Kay,et al.  Gender in Practice: A Study of Lawyers' Lives , 1995 .

[19]  P. England,et al.  Gender inequality in paid employment. , 1987 .

[20]  E. Phelps The Statistical Theory of Racism and Sexism , 1972 .

[21]  Fiona M. Kay,et al.  Raising the bar : The gender stratification of law-firm capital , 1998 .

[22]  C. Gilligan In a Different Voice. Psychological Theory and Women’s Development. Cambridge, MA (Harvard University Press) 1982. , 1982 .

[23]  James N. Baron,et al.  Targets of Opportunity: Organizational and Environmental Determinants of Gender Integration within the California Civil Service, 1979-1985 , 1991, American Journal of Sociology.

[24]  B. A. Curran,et al.  The Lawyer Statistical Report the U.S. Legal Profession in the 1990s , 1994 .

[25]  Eve Spangler,et al.  Lawyers for Hire: Salaried Professionals at Work , 1986 .

[26]  Stanley Lieberson,et al.  A Piece of the Pie: Blacks and White Immigrants since 1880. , 1982 .

[27]  Patricia A. Roos,et al.  Job Queues, Gender Queues , 1990 .

[28]  Denise D. Bielby,et al.  Cumulative Versus Continuous Disadvantage in an Unstructured Labor Market , 1992 .

[29]  M. Marini,et al.  SEX DIFFERENCES IN EARNINGS IN THE UNITED STATES , 1989 .

[30]  Russell A. Kazal Revisiting assimilation: The rise, fall, and reappraisal of a concept in American ethnic history , 1995 .

[31]  H. Perlstadt,et al.  NOW THAT WE ARE HERE: , 1993 .

[32]  J. Pfeffer,et al.  Paying the Professor: Sources of Salary Variation in Academic Labor Markets , 1994 .

[33]  Jerry A. Jacobs,et al.  The Bureaucratic Labor Market: The Case of the Federal Civil Service. , 1989 .

[34]  C. Seron,et al.  The business of practicing law : the work lives of solo and small-firm attorneys , 1997 .

[35]  E. Smigel,et al.  The Wall Street Lawyer: Professional Organization Man , 1966 .

[36]  Eliot Freidson,et al.  Professional Powers: A Study of the Institutionalization of Formal Knowledge , 1986 .

[37]  Pi-Ling Fan,et al.  The gender gap in earnings at career entry , 1997 .

[38]  Sara Ruddick Maternal Thinking: Toward a Politics of Peace , 1989 .

[39]  C. Ridgeway,et al.  INTERACTION AND THE CONSERVATION OF GENDER INEQUALITY: CONSIDERING EMPLOYMENT* , 1997 .

[40]  Lenahan O'Connell,et al.  Work Orientations of Males and Females: Exploring the Gender Socialization Approach* , 1989 .

[41]  S. Cohn Clerical Labor Intensity and the Feminization of Clerical Labor in Great Britain, 1857–1937 , 1985 .

[42]  Cynthia Fuchs Epstein,et al.  Chicago Lawyers: The Social Structure of the Bar. , 1982 .

[43]  S. J. Spurr Sex Discrimination in the Legal Profession: A Study of Promotion , 1990 .

[44]  T. Halliday Beyond Monopoly: Lawyers, State Crises, and Professional Empowerment , 1987 .

[45]  J. Hoy Franchise Law Firms and the Transformation of Personal Legal Services , 1997 .

[46]  Marc Galanter,et al.  Tournament of Lawyers: The Transformation of the Big Law Firm , 1991 .

[47]  Donald Tomaskovic-Devey,et al.  Gender and Racial Inequality at Work: The Sources and Consequences of Job Segregation. , 1994 .

[48]  Carrie J. Menkel-Meadow,et al.  The Comparative Sociology of Women Lawyers: The "Feminization" of the Legal Profession , 1986, Osgoode Hall Law Journal.

[49]  M. Marini,et al.  Gender and Job Values , 1996 .

[50]  R. Rosenfeld,et al.  Occupational Sex Segregation and Women's Early Career Job Shifts , 1992 .

[51]  C. Epstein,et al.  Glass Ceilings and Open Doors: Women's Advancement in the Legal Profession , 1995 .

[52]  W. Bielby,et al.  Work Commitment, Sex-Role Attitudes, and Women's Employment. , 1984 .

[53]  Paula England,et al.  The Failure of Human Capital Theory to Explain Occupational Sex Segregation. , 1982 .

[54]  Nancy J. Chodorow,et al.  The Reproduction of Mothering: Psychoanalysis and the Sociology of Gender , 1978 .

[55]  Stephen J. Spurr,et al.  Turnover and Promotion of Lawyers An Inquiry into Gender Differences , 1994 .

[56]  L. Morgan Glass-ceiling effect or cohort effect ? A longitudinal study of the gender earnings gap for engineers, 1982 to 1989 , 1998 .

[57]  Allen C. Bluedorn,et al.  Men and Women of the Corporation , 1978 .

[58]  Lawyers' Ethics, a Survey of the New York City Bar , 1966 .

[59]  J. S. Long,et al.  Rank Advancement in Academic Careers: Sex Differences and the Effects of Productivity. , 1993 .