1 / 26

Ah- young Kim Woosuk Choi Seungkwon Jang

Directors’ Gender Role Identity and Performance : Gender and governance of a Korean consumer co-0perative, iCOOP. 7 th ICA ASIA-PACIFIC CO-OPERATIVE RESEARCH CONFERENCE Kobe, Japan 26 th November 2012. Ah- young Kim Woosuk Choi Seungkwon Jang. ( Sungkonghoe University, Korea).

Télécharger la présentation

Ah- young Kim Woosuk Choi Seungkwon Jang

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Directors’ Gender Role Identity and Performance : Gender and governance of a Korean consumer co-0perative, iCOOP 7th ICA ASIA-PACIFIC CO-OPERATIVE RESEARCH CONFERENCE Kobe, Japan 26thNovember 2012 Ah- young Kim WoosukChoi Seungkwon Jang (Sungkonghoe University, Korea)

  2. Contents Introduction Theoretical Background Method Result Discussion

  3. Introduction 3 / 14 Growth Rate of Co-operatives in Korea • NACF : National Agricultural Cooperative Federation • NFFC : National Federation of Fisheries Co-operatives

  4. Introduction 4 / 14 Major Challenges • How can the co-operative enterprises be kept sustainable? • How can board members be motivated to take part actively in governance processes of co-operative?

  5. Introduction 5 / 14 Female-dominated Boards of Consumer Co-operatives in Korea Source : The Journal of the iCOOP Korea Cooperative Institute vol.8(2012)

  6. Introduction 6 / 14 Korean women’s participation in economical activities Source : Economically Active Population Survey(2011), Statistics Korea(http://kostat.go.kr)

  7. Introduction 7 / 14 Research Question • Does female dominance of the boards have characteristics of femininity? ☞ Do only women have characteristics of femininity? ☞ Do only men have characteristics of masculinity?

  8. Introduction 8 / 14 Research Purposes • To identify the structural relationship of gender role identity, their own governance and financial performance among the primary co-operatives’ boards • To identify the structural relationship of gender role identity, their own governance and value centered performance among the primary co-operatives’ boards

  9. Theoretical Background 9 / 14 Gender role identity • Gender role identity (Weiten, 1997): expectations about what is appropriate behavior for each sex • Masculinity : characteristics considered appropriate to a man • Femininity : characteristics considered appropriate to a woman - Androgyny : high levels of both masculinity and femininity

  10. Theoretical Background 10 / 14 Gender role identity • BSRI (Bem Sex-Role Inventory ): measurement tool developed by Bem (1974) to measure gender role identity ( masculine / feminine / androgynous /undifferentiated) → KSRI (Korean Sex-role Inventory): by Chung (1990) • Androgyny : Individuals increase flexibility and adaptability (Bem, 1974; Chung, 1990)

  11. Theoretical Background 11 / 14 Co-operative Governance • Co-operative Governance : the rules, the tools and the concrete procedures through which co-operative societies are managed (Shaw, 2006) Co-operative Governance

  12. Theoretical Background 12 / 14 Co-operative Governance • The fundamental principles of governance: democracy, representation, transparency • Spear, Cornforth and Aiken (2009): “Co-operatives often find it difficult to maintain membership involvement and commitment, particularly as organizations grow and become more professionally led. As a result, there is a danger that organizations can become dominated by their professional staffs and lose their members.”

  13. Theoretical Background 13 / 14 Co-operatives’ Performance • Co-operative Performance (Davis, 2012)

  14. Theoretical Background 14 / 14 Research Model

  15. Theoretical Background 15 / 14 Hypotheses • Hypothesis 1 Explicit Governance Explicit Governance Gender Role Identity Gender Role Identity Financial Performance Value centered Performance Implicit Governance Implicit Governance • Hypothesis 2

  16. Theoretical Background 16 / 14 Hypothesis 1 Explicit Governance Gender Role Identity Of Board Financial Performance Implicit Governance

  17. Theoretical Background 17 / 14 Hypothesis 2 Explicit Governance Gender Role Identity Of Board Value centered Performance Implicit Governance

  18. Method 18 / 14 Samples • 44 primary co-operatives in iCOOP • 328 directors (323 women and 5 men) • Survey questionnaire • Analysis: using SPSS 12.0 & Smart PLS 2.0.

  19. Method 19 / 14 Variables

  20. Method 20 / 14 Variables ---------------------- * The House Meeting is grassroots units for member participation in new iCOOP product development, food safety tests and campaigns.

  21. Result 21 / 14 Result of Hypothesis 1 The structural relationship among gender role identity of boards, co-operative governance and financial performance

  22. Theoretical Background 22 / 14 Hypothesis 1. Explicit Governance Gender Role Identity of boards Financial Performance H1-1 (-) Implicit Governance H1-3 (+) H1-5 (-)

  23. Result 23 / 14 Result of Hypothesis 2 The structural relationship among gender role identity of boards, co-operative governance and value centered performance

  24. Theoretical Background 24 / 14 Hypothesis 2 Explicit Governance Gender Role Identity of Boards Value centered Performance Implicit Governance H2-3 (+) H2-5 (+)

  25. Conclusion 25 / 14 1) The gender role identity of boards affected their governance and performance significantly. ☞ Androgyny made their activities energetically and increased member’s participation. 2) The growth of female-dominated consumer co-operative can promote the woman’s participation in economic and social activities. 3) The research can promote further studies of co-operatives because the present research might be the first empirical research to analyze gender-conscious boards .

  26. Thank you

More Related