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The Hypocrisy of Gender Mainstreaming in Public Administration

Espersson, Malin LU (2025) In Gender, Work and Organization
Abstract
Thirty years on, gender mainstreaming is still a dominant strategy for working with gender equality, even though its effectiveness is debated. This is also the case in Sweden. This study focuses on how organizations in public administration, particularly municipalities and regions, are introduced to and approach gender mainstreaming. It aims to contribute with in-depth knowledge of how organizations deal with the institutional pressure to work with gender mainstreaming. Theoretically, this study draws on the concept of hypocrisy. The empirical material consists of interviews with public servants, managers, and politicians involved in gender mainstreaming, as well as observations and policy documents. The findings provide insights into the... (More)
Thirty years on, gender mainstreaming is still a dominant strategy for working with gender equality, even though its effectiveness is debated. This is also the case in Sweden. This study focuses on how organizations in public administration, particularly municipalities and regions, are introduced to and approach gender mainstreaming. It aims to contribute with in-depth knowledge of how organizations deal with the institutional pressure to work with gender mainstreaming. Theoretically, this study draws on the concept of hypocrisy. The empirical material consists of interviews with public servants, managers, and politicians involved in gender mainstreaming, as well as observations and policy documents. The findings provide insights into the discrepancies between talk, decisions, and action in gender mainstreaming. Although politicians' talk and decisions give legitimacy to organizations, their actions do not align accordingly. Public servants, dissatisfied with this perceived inaction, seek to prompt political responsibility and, when unsuccessful, try to assume it themselves. This paper advances a new perspective on the limited impact of gender mainstreaming by employing the lens of the hypocrisy, showing how gender mainstreaming might paradoxically defeat its own purpose. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Thirty years on, gender mainstreaming is still a dominant strategy for working with gender equality, even though its effectiveness is debated. This is also the case in Sweden. This study focuses on how organisations in public administration, particularly municipalities and regions, are introduced to and approach gender mainstreaming. It aims to contribute with in-depth knowledge of how organisations deal with the institutional pressure to work with gender mainstreaming. Theoretically, the study draws on the concept of hypocrisy. The empirical material consists of interviews with public servants, managers and politicians involved in gender mainstreaming as well as observations and policy documents. The findings provide insights into the... (More)
Thirty years on, gender mainstreaming is still a dominant strategy for working with gender equality, even though its effectiveness is debated. This is also the case in Sweden. This study focuses on how organisations in public administration, particularly municipalities and regions, are introduced to and approach gender mainstreaming. It aims to contribute with in-depth knowledge of how organisations deal with the institutional pressure to work with gender mainstreaming. Theoretically, the study draws on the concept of hypocrisy. The empirical material consists of interviews with public servants, managers and politicians involved in gender mainstreaming as well as observations and policy documents. The findings provide insights into the discrepancies between talk, decisions, and action in gender mainstreaming. While politicians' talk and decisions give legitimacy to organisations, their actions do not align accordingly. Public servants, dissatisfied with this perceived inaction, seek to prompt political responsibility and, when unsuccessful, try to assume it themselves. The paper advances a new perspective on the limited impact of gender mainstreaming by employing the lens of hypocrisy, showing how gender mainstreaming might paradoxically defeat its own purpose. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
in
Gender, Work and Organization
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:105020467834
ISSN
1468-0432
DOI
10.1111/gwao.70058
project
Jämställdhetsintegrering - från en byråkratisk process till ett "görande" som skapar reella skillnader
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4bccd80c-d103-4972-a799-ca8a21eab3c2
date added to LUP
2025-10-20 10:26:19
date last changed
2025-12-06 04:00:37
@article{4bccd80c-d103-4972-a799-ca8a21eab3c2,
  abstract     = {{Thirty years on, gender mainstreaming is still a dominant strategy for working with gender equality, even though its effectiveness is debated. This is also the case in Sweden. This study focuses on how organizations in public administration, particularly municipalities and regions, are introduced to and approach gender mainstreaming. It aims to contribute with in-depth knowledge of how organizations deal with the institutional pressure to work with gender mainstreaming. Theoretically, this study draws on the concept of hypocrisy. The empirical material consists of interviews with public servants, managers, and politicians involved in gender mainstreaming, as well as observations and policy documents. The findings provide insights into the discrepancies between talk, decisions, and action in gender mainstreaming. Although politicians' talk and decisions give legitimacy to organizations, their actions do not align accordingly. Public servants, dissatisfied with this perceived inaction, seek to prompt political responsibility and, when unsuccessful, try to assume it themselves. This paper advances a new perspective on the limited impact of gender mainstreaming by employing the lens of the hypocrisy, showing how gender mainstreaming might paradoxically defeat its own purpose.}},
  author       = {{Espersson, Malin}},
  issn         = {{1468-0432}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Gender, Work and Organization}},
  title        = {{The Hypocrisy of Gender Mainstreaming in Public Administration}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gwao.70058}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/gwao.70058}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}