To read this content please select one of the options below:

Charity, retail or care? Gender and managerialism in the charity retail sector

Elizabeth Parsons (School of Economic and Management Studies, University of Keele, Keele, UK)
Adelina Broadbridge (Department of Marketing, University of Stirling, Stirling, UK)

Women in Management Review

ISSN: 0964-9425

Article publication date: 9 October 2007

1550

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to explore how gender identity is played out in a particular type of work setting, that of charity retail, and to explore the impacts of increased managerialism on this process of identity construction.

Design/methodology/approach

The paper is informed by interviews with 22 charity shop managers from three UK cities. The narratives of three of these managers are chosen for more in‐depth analysis. The paper focuses primarily on understandings of identity as practised, exploring the enactment of a series of conflicting and overlapping “selves” in the workplace. The practices and discourses surrounding the retail (or businesslike) self, the charitable self and the caring self in particular are discussed.

Findings

It was found that the process of creeping managerialism in the sector both values and promotes the discourses of “retail” but marginalises those of “charity and of care”. This presents serious dilemmas of identity for charity shop managers and is a source of considerable stress for them. However, it was also found that managers were using the discourses of charity and of care to resist this managerial process. Attention was paid to the ways in which gendered identities are constrained and enabled by and through the discourses circulating in organisational life. Presents a series of observations concerning the future possibilities that retail work in particular might offer for identity construction.

Research limitations/implications

The analysis is based on a small sample of qualitative interviews, therefore the findings are not meant to be generalisable to the wider population. This “vignette” approach allows us to explore in some depth the relations between identity construction and organisational context.

Originality/value

Empirical paper using an alternative lens to analyse gender identity and the impacts of increasing managerialism on processes of identity construction. Highlights in particular the continual struggles over meaning within organisations.

Keywords

Citation

Parsons, E. and Broadbridge, A. (2007), "Charity, retail or care? Gender and managerialism in the charity retail sector", Women in Management Review, Vol. 22 No. 7, pp. 552-567. https://doi.org/10.1108/09649420710825724

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Related articles