Gender and Ethnicity: The Role of Successful Women in Promoting Equality and Social Change
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Tokenism from a Numerical Perspective
1.2. Tokenism from a Gender Perspective
1.3. Tokenism from an Ethnic Perspective
1.4. The Intersection of “Race”/Ethnicity and Gender
1.5. The Role of Tokens in Social Change
2. Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Procedures
2.3. Instrument
2.4. Analytical Strategy
3. Findings
3.1. Obstacles in the Professional Context
There are obstacles that are placed on black people (…) because there are few black people occupying positions of power, there is a misconception in society that these positions are not legitimate (…). So, in this sense, when I became more of a protagonist, as a director of [association x], there were always negative comments targeting me, trying to invalidate this position I occupied.(E1, black woman, Politics.)
“I feel like it was harder. I remember once I competed with a colleague for a position and came second. I shouldn’t have come second because according to objective criteria, I had a better degree, for example, I was the same age, my colleague didn’t have more experience than me (…), but the truth is he got the job. I don’t know if it was because I was a woman.”(E4, white woman, Academy and Politics.)
“In meetings, where I am systematically interrupted, my strategy is, by not raising my voice, to say in a loop ‘so, as I was saying’ (…). It is to not shut up (…). I think now my strategy is for more [women to be present].”(E9, white woman, Academy and Architecture.)
3.2. Visibility
We have this huge weight to do everything right (…). One thing I always heard at home was: ‘don’t forget that we are performing, and it is enough for one of us to make a mess to contaminate the whole group’ (…). What I feel is that I can’t be an individual (…), I am always [Jess] who is part of a group where all her performance is framed in that package. Again, if it’s positive, it doesn’t benefit the group. If it’s negative, it ends up reinforcing stereotypes. Why do I say it doesn’t benefit the group? Because I’m singled out as the exception to the rule, ‘ah, you’re different. Ah, you don’t count.’(E3, black woman, Journalism.)
Women, to become equal to men, have to be much better than men, because they have to be constantly proving that they do their work well.(E6, white woman, Journalism.)
In the workplace, I clearly felt that if I made any mistake, I was massacred. All it took was one. And for my white colleagues, it was different. I always felt the need to defend myself, to be cautious, not to get caught in any unpleasant situation, because I know that the slightest thing is going to be increased in a terrible way.(E2, black woman, Education.)
Being in a management position, I feel the scrutiny is greater and that mistakes are less forgivable, namely, by other men.(E6, white woman, Journalism.)
Now that I am [position in politics], I have more visibility (…), the hate speech, quite violent comments, which seek to humiliate me, are more frequent in the mailboxes.(E1, black woman, Politics.)
Yes, of course, I’m visible, I get a lot of messages from girls who are taking the course and they’re happy to get in touch with me (…), because I’m black and I’m fat. So, you’re imagining a black, fat woman being on television and having the impact that she has, people end up seeing that they can make it, because I made it and I don’t match the television standard.(E12, black woman, Television.)
3.3. Polarization
[Have you ever been treated differently for being a woman?]: Yes, I remember my first director had a line that was (…), there were two women in the newsroom, and he once walked in and said these two girls ‘are our flower vases’. I was just as much a journalist as the others but because we were women, we were just flower vases (…). In my time, I experienced that, the harassment for being a woman. And then, to get to senior management, they already think that women are not as competent.(E6, white woman, Journalism.)
[Have you ever been treated differently because you’re a woman?]: Yes, yes… I mean, I can’t really separate where gender discrimination is happening and where racial discrimination is happening. Because I’m both, but yes, I think that a lot of times, with black men, I’m treated in a subordinate way because I’m a woman. I think that’s where I can distance myself better from racial discrimination (…) but since, in Portugal, my interactions are with white people… Well, it’s not easy to know which is which.(E1, black woman, Politics.)
(…) when we are in a work context, there may be people who tend to listen more to a white woman’s voice than a black woman, even though that black woman may, from an academic point of view and political positioning, be better than the white woman.(E7, white woman, Human Rights.)
Yes, I have been excluded from group activities because I’m a woman, yes.(E16, white woman, Journalism.)
I feel that I needed, and that it would be quite positive for me, to establish alliances with black women with whom I could do articulated work because we face the same difficulties and obstacles.(E1, black woman, Politics.)
3.4. Assimilation
I feel like I always need to be strong (…). It’s like I can’t have moments of vulnerability, and when I do, I have them alone. This is another thing regarding black women, sometimes a deep loneliness (…). Because even in African culture, this is expected of the black woman. So, we are attacked on all fronts, which is our culture, and the society where I was born also ends up having the same vision. There is this idea that black women are more resilient (…). Black women can take it, black women can take anything, and that is a big lie.(E2, black woman, Education.)
Women in leadership positions end up adopting characteristics associated with masculinity (…). It’s kind of a cloak that is put on (…) and what I think is that there is always criticism directed at women (…) either because they are too tough and shouldn’t be, or because they are too emotional and, therefore, they are fragile and shouldn’t be (…). It seems like they’re never okay because that’s not traditionally their sphere.(E10, white woman, Academy and Human Rights.)
3.5. Imbalances in the Professional World
This is not a question of qualifications because we know that women today, in numerical terms, are better qualified than men.(E4, white woman, Academy and Politics.)
I would say that [being a woman] is being a huge juggler. Not having time (…), being tremendously overloaded with duties of care, personal life and, at the same time, in my profession, I must prove (…). And sometimes when you give less attention to the family sphere because of work, you feel a lot of guilt about that. We must manage various guilts all the time. The superwoman syndrome is very violent.(E9, white woman, Academy and Architecture.)
In Portuguese society, there still is this sexist behavior, reducing the place of women in society in relation to men. This issue of the listed companies, the issue of the lack of visibility of women in the media, is still a reflection of this sexist society that we have.(E15, black woman, Human Rights.)
I think these are measures aimed at correcting historical errors. I would very much like them not to be necessary but as long as there is inequality, the mechanisms against that inequality have to be effective, and therefore I absolutely agree with quotas and the parity law for as long as inequalities persist (…). That’s not only for women but for all socially vulnerable groups.(E5, white woman, Academy and Human Rights.)
3.6. Women as “Agents of Change”
Despite the obstacles that must be removed, I recognize how I occupy a place of privilege that many black people have not been able to achieve and hold. And that is my commitment, and I hope this will be my legacy, to create the conditions so that more black people can occupy the same place that I occupy today.(E1, black woman, Politics.)
These obstacles have always existed and are also part of the struggle in which I am involved and mobilized, which is precisely to denounce and dismantle these prejudices (…) to work internally in the party so that the ability to interpret this matter is more conscious (…), through training, articles that I write, sharing information, integrating governing bodies.(E1, black woman, Politics.)
We have a media outlet that is exclusively dedicated to talking about women (…). Having a media outlet gives visibility to women, that gives role models to younger girls who are on the path (…), you show her that there are women who are there, that it’s not an aberration to want to be a leader (…).(E16, white female, Journalism.)
I can’t handle everything, so I have a team helping me. I generally integrate people to work with me.” [Do you feel you should help other women? What about minorities?]: “Yes, I only accept black psychologists.(E11, black woman, Psychology.)
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Interview Number | Nationality | Skin Color | Job Title |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Portuguese and African | Black | Politics |
2 | Portuguese | Black | Education |
3 | Portuguese and African | Black | Journalism |
4 | Portuguese | White | Academy and Politics |
5 | Portuguese | White | Academy and Human Rights |
6 | Portuguese | White | Journalism |
7 | Portuguese | White | Human Rights |
8 | Portuguese and African | Black | Academy |
9 | Portuguese | White | Architecture and Human Rights |
10 | Portuguese | White | Academy and Human Rights |
11 | Brazilian | Black | Psychology |
12 | Portuguese and African | Black | Television |
13 | Portuguese | White | Science |
14 | Portuguese and African | Black | Communication and Images |
15 | Portuguese and African | Black | Human Rights |
16 | Portuguese | White | Journalism |
Themes | Subthemes |
---|---|
Obstacles in the professional context | Racial inequalities |
Gender inequalities | |
Integration strategies | |
Visibility | Pressure to perform well |
Scrutinized errors and trivialized successes | |
Targets of attack | |
Positive visibility | |
Polarization | Different treatment between men and women |
Intersection between gender and ethnicity/race | |
Different treatment between white and black women | |
Informal isolation | |
Establishment of alliances | |
Assimilation | Black women can endure anything |
White women adopt male behaviors | |
Imbalances in the professional world | Reactions to ethnic–racial and gender disparities |
Work–family im/balance | |
Patriarchal and sexist society | |
Implementation of affirmative action measures | |
Women as “agents of change” | Commitment to their group’s success |
Elimination of stereotypes and discriminatory policies | |
Networking, mentoring, and visibility | |
Positive discrimination |
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Ferreira, R.A.; Santos, M.H. Gender and Ethnicity: The Role of Successful Women in Promoting Equality and Social Change. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 299. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11070299
Ferreira RA, Santos MH. Gender and Ethnicity: The Role of Successful Women in Promoting Equality and Social Change. Social Sciences. 2022; 11(7):299. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11070299
Chicago/Turabian StyleFerreira, Raquel Alexandra, and Maria Helena Santos. 2022. "Gender and Ethnicity: The Role of Successful Women in Promoting Equality and Social Change" Social Sciences 11, no. 7: 299. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11070299
APA StyleFerreira, R. A., & Santos, M. H. (2022). Gender and Ethnicity: The Role of Successful Women in Promoting Equality and Social Change. Social Sciences, 11(7), 299. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci11070299