- Title
- More women, more money? The impact of discourse on legal and regulatory initiatives regarding women on corporate boards
- Creator
- Watson, Katherine Michelle
- Relation
- University of Newcastle Research Higher Degree Thesis
- Resource Type
- thesis
- Date
- 2019
- Description
- Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
- Description
- The advancement of women on corporate boards is an oft-discussed social issue in many countries. Little existing scholarship, however, compares the nature of legal and regulatory initiatives across international jurisdictions. Similarly, although there is a plethora of research into the potential economic benefits of increasing the number of women on corporate boards, almost none of the academic literature explicitly considers the nature of the arguments used to support measures to further this goal. This thesis addresses such shortcomings by examining common threads in the arguments around gender diversity on corporate boards and applying doctrinal analysis to characterise the existing (and some proposed) legal and regulatory initiatives that have sought to address the issue. This forms the basis of an exploration of the relationship between the discourses that frame the debate regarding women on corporate boards and the various policy interventions introduced to advance that goal. The thesis uses case studies to trace the relationship between discourse and policy in four countries: Norway, Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia. Analysis of these relationships highlights the complex interplay between discourse and policy implementation and points to three significant conclusions. Firstly, the primary discourses surrounding women on boards are worth attention in their own right. Secondly, discourse affects policy. The assumptions inherent in dominant discourses can pre-emptively exclude certain policy initiatives from consideration, even causing advocates to undermine their own stated aims. Thirdly, and most encouragingly, the resulting analyses likewise suggest that policy initiatives and regulatory measures, once implemented, can impact on discourses and even public attitudes.
- Subject
- corporate law; women on boards; gender; directors
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1397981
- Identifier
- uon:34375
- Rights
- Copyright 2019 Katherine Michelle Watson
- Language
- eng
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