Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
J. Exelby
UAE Swears in First Woman Judge
R. Alsanea
The Girls of Riyadh
J. Cohoon, W. Aspray
The State of Social Science Research on Gender and IT Entrepreneurship: A Summary of Research Literature on Women's Entrepreneurship in the Information Technology Field
Sheik Mohammed Bin Rashid Establishment for Young Business Leaders
Women in the UAE
S. Kvale (1983)
The Qualitative Research InterviewJournal of Phenomenological Psychology, 14
R. Abouzied
Emirate women an economic force
M. Holosko (2001)
An Overview of Qualitative Research Methods
H. Foust‐Cummings, L. Sabattini, N. Carter
Women in Technology: Maximizing Talent, Minimizing Barriers
M. Erogul, D. McCrohan
Do socio‐cultural factors affect female entrepreneurship in the UAE?
M. Erogul, D. McCrohan
Socio‐cultural factors inhibiting female entrepreneurship in the United Arab Emirates
Cheri Ostroff, L. Atwater (2003)
Does whom you work with matter? Effects of referent group gender and age composition on managers' compensation.The Journal of applied psychology, 88 4
S. Hewlett, C. Buck‐Luce, L. Servon, L. Sherbin, P. Shiller, E. Sosnovich
The Athena Factor: Reversing the Brain‐drain in Science, Engineering, and Technology
Clem Herman (2010)
Women and Information Technology : Research on Underrepresentation
Dubai Women's Establishment
Female Emirate Employees in Dubai for the year 2008
N. Aswad
Expanding the Role of Women in Science, Technology and Engineering: The Case of the United Arab Emirates
H. Haan
Report on a survey of UAE nationals in micro, small and medium‐sized enterprises
R. House (2006)
Culture, leadership, and organizations : the GLOBE study of 62 societies, 50
N. Ramsey, P. McCorduck
Where are the Women in Information Technology?
A. Abdulrahman, A. Saif, N. Ahmed, S. Abdulla
A comparative analysis of the beliefs that Emirates have towards the evolving nature of business leadership in the UAE”, recipient of the Zayed University College of Business Dean's Award for “Best capstone project” and the award for “Best capstone research project at Zayed University 2009
S. Kvale
The qualitative research interview: a phenomenological and hermeneutical mode of understanding
C. Simard, A. Davies‐Henderson, S. Gilmartin, L. Schiebinger, T. Whitney
Climbing the Technical Ladder: Obstacles and Solutions for Mid‐Level Women in Technology
I. Al Abed
United Arab Emirates Yearbook
A. Hill
The top 50 women in world business
Katty Marmenout (2009)
Women-Focused Leadership Development in the Middle East: Generating Local Knowledge
C. Cassell (2004)
Qualitative Methods in Organizational Research
Myra Sadker, David Sadker (1995)
Failing at fairness : how our schools cheat girls
C. Ashcraft, S. Blithe
Women in IT: The Facts
R. Hausmann, L. Tyson, S. Zahidi (2011)
The global gender gap report. 2010.
D. Yousef
Industry ventures get low priority: high start‐up costs and lack of technology limit Emirate participation
H. Haan
Small Enterprises: Women Entrepreneurs in the UAE Labor Market Study No. 19, Centre for Labor Market Research and Information
F. Mubarak
Achievements in the progress of the UAE women's federation
R. Lacey
The Kingdom: Arabia and the House of Saud
B. Metcalfe (2006)
Exploring cultural dimensions of gender and management in the Middle EastThunderbird International Business Review, 48
C. Kock, R. Upitis
Is computer time equal for girls? Potential internet inequities
R. Lacey (2009)
Inside the Kingdom: Kings, Clerics, Modernists, Terrorists and the Struggle for Saudi Arabia
D. McCrohan, M. Erogul, N. Vellinga, Q. Tong
National Global Entrepreneurship Monitor Report for the United Arab Emirates
J. Mero
International power 50
J. Jenson, C. Rose (2003)
Women@Work: Listening to gendered relations of power in teachers' talk about new technologiesGender and Education, 15
G. Hofstede (2001)
Culture′s Consequences: Comparing Values, Behaviors, Institutions and Organizations Across Nations
H. Salloum
Women in the United Arab Emirates
Richard Hycner (1985)
Some guidelines for the phenomenological analysis of interview dataHuman Studies, 8
Dubai Women's Establishment
Reasons behind UAE Women's Reluctance to Participate in Activating the Country's Strategy
M. Erogul
Improving competency of recognizing and using resources through increasing networking activity and interaction
N. Forster, N. Ibrahim, A. Ebrahim
A study of work‐family conflicts among professional Emirate women in the United Arab Emirates
J. Dilevko, Roma Harris (1997)
Information Technology and Social Relations: Portrayals of Gender Roles in High Tech Product AdvertisementsJ. Am. Soc. Inf. Sci., 48
M. Mostafa (2005)
Attitudes towards women managers in theUnited Arab EmiratesJournal of Managerial Psychology, 20
H. Muller, J. Nasr, N. Khoury, H. Azzam (1987)
Women, employment, and development in the Arab worldDie Welt des Islams, 27
N. Langowitz, M. Minniti, P. Arenius (2005)
Global Entrepreneurship Monitor: 2004 Report on Women and Entrepreneurship
U. Emirates (2008)
Women in the United Arab Emirates : a portrait of progress
(1931)
Ideas : general introduction to pure phenomenology
L. Moore, N. Forster
An exploratory analysis of cross‐cultural differences in sex‐typing, gender self‐attributes; and the emergence of androgynous leadership traits
K. Deepa
Seven reasons why women in science and technology remain invisible
A. Elewa, S. Salama, B. Za'za'
President endorses new UAE cabinet
Dubai Strategic Plan
Dubai strategic plan 2015
N. MacFarquhar (2009)
The Media Relations Department of Hizbollah Wishes You a Happy Birthday: Unexpected Encounters in the Changing Middle East
A. El-Ghannam (2002)
Analytical study of women’s participation in economic activities in Arab societiesEquality, Diversity and Inclusion, 21
J. Campbell, A. Hourani (1991)
A History of the Arab PeoplesForeign Affairs, 70
S. Hewlett, M. Jackson, L. Sherbin, E. Sosnovich, K. Sumberg
The Under‐leveraged Talent Pool: Women Technologists on Wall Street
Bente Elkjaer (1992)
Girls and Information Technology in Denmark—an account of a socially constructed problemGender and Education, 4
M. Marmenout
Breaking gender stereotypes in the Middle East
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to describe the principal reasons why Emirate women are under‐represented in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) information technology (IT) sector; and the barriers and challenges that national women have encountered while working in this sector of the national economy. Design/methodology/approach – The paper draws on data from 20 structured in‐depth interviews conducted with Emirate women who had worked for a minimum of five years in IT. Findings – Although national women have made remarkable inroads into almost all professions and occupations in recent years, they are still noticeably under‐represented in IT, particularly in the private sector. In addition, very few are in senior‐level positions and there are, at the time of writing, no Emirate women technology‐entrepreneurs. The results show that cultural and familial factors still inhibit many young Emirate women from choosing careers in this profession, and negative gendered attitudinal assumptions about women are still prevalent within the local IT sector. Research limitations/implications – The sample size was small, so we were unable to test specific research hypotheses, or compare our results with quantitative cohort surveys conducted in other countries. Nevertheless, the findings warrant additional research, as increasing numbers of Emirate women graduate from local universities with IT/MIS degrees, and further research on this topic is described. Practical implications – Five practical strategies are identified to encourage more young Emirate women to embrace IT careers in the future. Originality/value – This is the first research on this issue conducted in the UAE/GCC region.
Equality Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal – Emerald Publishing
Published: Sep 20, 2011
Keywords: United Arab Emirates; Women; Information technology; National cultures; Employment
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.