ISSN: 0114-0582
Online from: 1997
Subject Area: Accounting and Finance
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| Title: | New Zealand chartered accountants' work/family strategies and consequences for career success |
|---|---|
| Author(s): | Rosalind H. Whiting, (Department of Accountancy and Business Law, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand) |
| Citation: | Rosalind H. Whiting, (2008) "New Zealand chartered accountants' work/family strategies and consequences for career success", Pacific Accounting Review, Vol. 20 Iss: 2, pp.111 - 137 |
| Keywords: | Accountancy, Careers, Family, Feminism, Gender, New Zealand |
| Article type: | Research paper |
| DOI: | 10.1108/01140580810892472 (Permanent URL) |
| Publisher: | Emerald Group Publishing Limited |
| Acknowledgements: | The author gratefully acknowledges comments from the late Mary Mallon, Jane Broadbent, Prem Sikka, Markus Milne, Gregory Liyanarchchi, Carolyn Stringer and four anonymous reviewers. |
| Abstract: | Purpose – The purpose of this study is to investigate the strategies that New Zealand chartered accountants use to combine work and family responsibilities, and to relate these strategies to chartered accountants' career success. Design/methodology/approach – The study analysed qualitative career history data obtained from interviews with 69 male and female experienced chartered accountants. Findings – A comprehensive work/family strategy typology for New Zealand chartered accountants was developed. The five types identified were Traditional Men, Traditional Women, Work First Women, Family Balancers, and Stepping Stone Men. In general, those who followed a male linear career model (Traditional Men and Work First Women) demonstrated higher levels of career success. Some notable exceptions showed that career success could be achieved by those with higher levels of family responsibilities, if the employing organisation does not demand rigid conformance with the linear career model. Research limitations/implications – The purposeful bias in the sample selection and the diversity in the interviewees' workplaces decrease the study's generalisability. But those factors contributed to the ability to identify a wide range of current work/family strategies. Practical implications – The paper provides a basis for the accountancy profession to adapt to the feminisation of the profession and the increasing demands for work/life balance by developing policies and practices targeted at enhancing career progression for a more diverse range of work/family strategic types than is currently recognised. Originality/value – There are no prior data describing the diversity in New Zealand chartered accountants' work/family strategies. |
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