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Who Runs the Firm? A Long-Term Analysis of Gender Inequality on Swiss Corporate Boards
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 March 2020
Abstract
The recent arrival of women on corporate boards has been extensively discussed in the literature. However, most of the studies focus on very recent times. This article analyzes the presence of women on the corporate boards of the largest firms in Switzerland across the past hundred years. It shows that until the beginning of the 1970s, the very few women sitting on the boardrooms belonged to the families owning the firms. Two main factors contributed then to the progressive opening of the corporate elites to women. First, the extending in 1971 of “universal suffrage” to women led to a feminization of the political elites, and women with a political profile entered the boardrooms of firms in the distribution and retailing sector. Second, the increasing globalization of the economy at the end of the twentieth century contributed to weaken the cohesion of the very male and Swiss corporate elite. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, however, the presence of women remained low in international comparison, and they were still hitting the “glass ceiling” regarding the top positions in the firm.
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- © The Author 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved.
Footnotes
This contribution takes place in a larger collective research on Swiss elites that started ten years ago and owes a lot to my colleagues at the Swiss Elites Observatory (Obelis). They have contributed both to gathering empirical data and to stimulating the thinking behind this article. I am also grateful to Alix Heiniger, Rahel Kunz, and Céline Naef for their very useful comments on earlier versions of the article.
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