Soft regulation of women on boards: Evidence from Canada

In this study, I examine the effectiveness of a national board gender diversity disclosure requirement, which is, arguably, on the “soft” end of the continuum of boardroom interventions. Using a panel dataset of 1847 hand‐collected corporate disclosures from 2015 to 2018, I perform a post‐event, his...

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Veröffentlicht in:Business and society review (1974) 2022-12, Vol.127 (4), p.779-808
1. Verfasser: Oldford, Erin
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description In this study, I examine the effectiveness of a national board gender diversity disclosure requirement, which is, arguably, on the “soft” end of the continuum of boardroom interventions. Using a panel dataset of 1847 hand‐collected corporate disclosures from 2015 to 2018, I perform a post‐event, historical trend analysis of the efficacy of Canada's 2014 intervention. I find evidence of real progress in the 4 years following intervention against several benchmarks. Specifically, improvements in critical mass are documented, with the proportion of boards with three of more women reaching 18.8% in 2018. Tokenism remains an issue with very little change in the number of Canadian boards with only one woman. Further analyses using a sorting methodology and panel regression analysis reveal that progress toward board gender diversity is achieved by those with board gender targets, board seat renewal policies, and written board diversity policies. In addition, I find that larger companies achieve greater progress and that progress is clustered by industry.
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source Wiley Online Library; EBSCO Business Source Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects board of directors
Canada
diversity disclosures
Gender
gender diversity
Multiculturalism & pluralism
Panel data
regulatory intervention
soft law
Tokenism
Women
women on boards
title Soft regulation of women on boards: Evidence from Canada
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