Men's accommodations to women entering a nontraditional occupation:: A case of rapid transit operatives

Gender and Society 3 (3):373-387 (1989)
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Abstract

This article examines problems that arise when women enter nontraditional blue-collar occupations. Despite job security, women's arrival in one such workplace generated strains by threatening assumptions of male supremacy. Previous research has examined women's modes of accommodation to male-dominated workplaces. In this case, men as well as women developed accommodative patterns that allowed them to accept women as co-workers without giving up their beliefs about male superiority.

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