Retention over attraction: A review of women's experiences in the Australian construction industry; challenges and solutions

Despite substantial investments and efforts by governments, construction organisations, and researchers, the construction industry remains one of the most male-dominated industries in Australia, with women being underrepresented numerically and hierarchically. Efforts to attract and retain women in...

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Main Authors: Ghanbaripour, Amir Naser, Tumpa, Roksana Jahan, Sunindijo, Riza Yosia, Zhang, Weiwei, Yousefian, Parinaz, Camozzi, Ranka Novak, Hon, Carol, Talebian, Nima, Liu, Tingting, Hemmati, Mina
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Published: MDPI 2023
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/38690/
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spelling my.um.eprints.386902023-12-01T04:22:13Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/38690/ Retention over attraction: A review of women's experiences in the Australian construction industry; challenges and solutions Ghanbaripour, Amir Naser Tumpa, Roksana Jahan Sunindijo, Riza Yosia Zhang, Weiwei Yousefian, Parinaz Camozzi, Ranka Novak Hon, Carol Talebian, Nima Liu, Tingting Hemmati, Mina HQ The family. Marriage. Woman TH Building construction Despite substantial investments and efforts by governments, construction organisations, and researchers, the construction industry remains one of the most male-dominated industries in Australia, with women being underrepresented numerically and hierarchically. Efforts to attract and retain women in construction have been implemented inconsistently on an ad hoc basis. As part of a larger research project that focuses on retaining women in the Australian construction industry, this research conducts a systematic literature review (SLR) in accordance with the PRISMA guidelines. The objective is to explore the factors that influence women's careers and their experiences in the Australian construction industry that have been identified in the literature over the past three decades. Additionally, the findings are anticipated to inform future efforts to evaluate the effectiveness of current initiatives to retain women and develop a framework for enhancing women's experiences and retaining them in this profession. This SLR revealed that excessive and rigid work hours, gendered culture and informal rules, limited career development opportunities, and negative perceptions of women's abilities are the main factors and issues that cause women to leave the industry. Among these, rigid and long work hours seem to be the foremost factor to be prioritised. Understanding the roles of key variables in driving this cultural change is important to ensure that concrete progress is made. The paper draws three major aspects from the literature in which solutions and policies can be researched, designed and implemented. MDPI 2023-02 Article PeerReviewed Ghanbaripour, Amir Naser and Tumpa, Roksana Jahan and Sunindijo, Riza Yosia and Zhang, Weiwei and Yousefian, Parinaz and Camozzi, Ranka Novak and Hon, Carol and Talebian, Nima and Liu, Tingting and Hemmati, Mina (2023) Retention over attraction: A review of women's experiences in the Australian construction industry; challenges and solutions. Buildings, 13 (2). ISSN 2075-5309, DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13020490 <https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13020490>. 10.3390/buildings13020490
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic HQ The family. Marriage. Woman
TH Building construction
spellingShingle HQ The family. Marriage. Woman
TH Building construction
Ghanbaripour, Amir Naser
Tumpa, Roksana Jahan
Sunindijo, Riza Yosia
Zhang, Weiwei
Yousefian, Parinaz
Camozzi, Ranka Novak
Hon, Carol
Talebian, Nima
Liu, Tingting
Hemmati, Mina
Retention over attraction: A review of women's experiences in the Australian construction industry; challenges and solutions
description Despite substantial investments and efforts by governments, construction organisations, and researchers, the construction industry remains one of the most male-dominated industries in Australia, with women being underrepresented numerically and hierarchically. Efforts to attract and retain women in construction have been implemented inconsistently on an ad hoc basis. As part of a larger research project that focuses on retaining women in the Australian construction industry, this research conducts a systematic literature review (SLR) in accordance with the PRISMA guidelines. The objective is to explore the factors that influence women's careers and their experiences in the Australian construction industry that have been identified in the literature over the past three decades. Additionally, the findings are anticipated to inform future efforts to evaluate the effectiveness of current initiatives to retain women and develop a framework for enhancing women's experiences and retaining them in this profession. This SLR revealed that excessive and rigid work hours, gendered culture and informal rules, limited career development opportunities, and negative perceptions of women's abilities are the main factors and issues that cause women to leave the industry. Among these, rigid and long work hours seem to be the foremost factor to be prioritised. Understanding the roles of key variables in driving this cultural change is important to ensure that concrete progress is made. The paper draws three major aspects from the literature in which solutions and policies can be researched, designed and implemented.
format Article
author Ghanbaripour, Amir Naser
Tumpa, Roksana Jahan
Sunindijo, Riza Yosia
Zhang, Weiwei
Yousefian, Parinaz
Camozzi, Ranka Novak
Hon, Carol
Talebian, Nima
Liu, Tingting
Hemmati, Mina
author_facet Ghanbaripour, Amir Naser
Tumpa, Roksana Jahan
Sunindijo, Riza Yosia
Zhang, Weiwei
Yousefian, Parinaz
Camozzi, Ranka Novak
Hon, Carol
Talebian, Nima
Liu, Tingting
Hemmati, Mina
author_sort Ghanbaripour, Amir Naser
title Retention over attraction: A review of women's experiences in the Australian construction industry; challenges and solutions
title_short Retention over attraction: A review of women's experiences in the Australian construction industry; challenges and solutions
title_full Retention over attraction: A review of women's experiences in the Australian construction industry; challenges and solutions
title_fullStr Retention over attraction: A review of women's experiences in the Australian construction industry; challenges and solutions
title_full_unstemmed Retention over attraction: A review of women's experiences in the Australian construction industry; challenges and solutions
title_sort retention over attraction: a review of women's experiences in the australian construction industry; challenges and solutions
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2023
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/38690/
_version_ 1784511846024216576
score 13.214268