August 2024
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197 Reads
Academy of Management Proceedings
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August 2024
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197 Reads
Academy of Management Proceedings
April 2024
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70 Reads
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8 Citations
The Academy of Management Annals
Even though management research on caste is growing, it is not yet on a clear trajectory to realize its vast potential due to varying terminology and framing of caste, the limited incorporation of directly relevant work from proximate disciplines, and the narrow and selective usage of the attributes of caste. To remove these obstacles, we review 259 scholarly works on caste (216 articles and 43 books and research reports) and develop an integrative framework to (a) clarify the contemporary manifestations of caste as being a graded hierarchy, an inherited membership, and a set of socially enforced practices; and (b) summarize the outcomes of caste at individual, occupational, organizational, and societal levels, while also consolidating the mechanisms through which caste influences these outcomes. Additionally, to position management scholarship on this topic for greater impact, we develop a research agenda that reflects contemporary interests in management research and the world at large about inclusion in organizations and societies. The caste system has practical significance for a large portion of the global population.
January 2024
January 2023
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161 Reads
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13 Citations
Journal of International Business Policy
Caste is an informal institution that influences socioeconomic action in many contexts. It is becoming increasingly evident that international business research, practice, and policy need to programmatically address caste. To facilitate this endeavor, we review the limited research in IB that has addressed caste, and theorize caste as a distinct informal institution by distinguishing it from other systems of stratification like race, class, and gender. In addition, we propose a parsimonious framework to highlight the implications of caste for Indian and non-Indian MNEs in their Indian and global operations. In doing this, we focus on implications with respect to the internal organization and inter-organizational relationships of MNEs, and consider how these implications might differ as based on the MNEs’ organizational forms. We then build on these implications to discuss how MNEs and other stakeholders of international business can address caste inequalities via policies related to human rights, anti-racism, and affirmative action. By bridging theory, practice, and policy, we pave the way for MNEs to address global inequalities that relate to caste.
August 2021
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151 Reads
Academy of Management Proceedings
October 2020
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1,021 Reads
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75 Citations
Organization Studies
The caste system has received scant attention in organization studies, despite persisting over thousands of years, influencing the socioeconomic lives of over a billion people around the world and subjecting over 300 million people to severe socioeconomic discrimination. By overlooking caste, scholars risk conforming subaltern empirics to imperialist knowledge and miss the nuance and complexity that caste can bring to organization studies. We argue that the caste system is an institution that affects the workplace, yet it is difficult to dismantle because of its rooting in bodies and the sacred, which strips away agency. As an institution that is deeply embodied, caste has implications for institutional work, precarious work, and modern slavery. We conclude with a call for scholarly engagement with caste to study its implications in the pursuit of grand challenges and inclusive organizations.
August 2020
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9 Reads
Academy of Management Proceedings
June 2020
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388 Reads
March 2020
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3,663 Reads
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102 Citations
Journal of Business Ethics
Research on economic inequality has largely focused on understanding the relationship between organizations and inequality but has paid limited attention to the role of institutions in the creation and maintenance of inequality. In this article, we use insights from the caste system—an institution that perpetuates socio-economic inequalities and limits human functions—to elaborate on three elements of economic inequality: uneven dispersions in resource endowments, uneven access to productive resources and opportunities, and uneven rewards to resource contributions. We argue that economic inequalities persist because these three different elements of inequality feed from and reinforce each other. Our study underscores the potential of the caste lens to inform research on economic inequality as well as organizational theory and practice.
April 2018
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42 Reads
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2 Citations
Academy of Management Proceedings
... In addition, researchers may adopt an intersectional lens to examine whether people from different intersectional groups (e.g., Black male, Latino female) experience microaggressions in different ways. Furthermore, extending scholarship on inequality and racial microaggressions, researchers can explore the experiences of racial microaggressions of individuals across hierarchies of social class (Gray & Kish-Gephart), caste (Bapuji et al., 2024a), and disability (Kulkarni & Lengnick-Hall, 2014). ...
April 2024
The Academy of Management Annals
... A multitude of languages are spoken in India, whereas English speakers are concentrated among the educated or 'elite' (Rukmini, 2019). In addition, in the Indian context, women are under-represented in the labor force in general 2 and more so in sectors, such as heavy manufacturing, and the caste system "is still intrinsically present in aspects of Indian day-to-day life" (Anand, 2021;Bapuji et al., 2023;Cooke, 2010;Laleman et al., 2015 p. 437). 3 Our study makes three contributions. ...
January 2023
Journal of International Business Policy
... In disadvantaged communities, limited accessibility contributes to higher rates of chronic diseases, lower life expectancy, and overall poorer health outcomes (Hill et al., 2013). Similarly, inadequate access to economic resources such as job opportunities and financial services impedes economic mobility and perpetuates socioeconomic inequalities (Chrispal et al., 2021). Enhancing spatial accessibility can mitigate these disparities, promoting social equity and fostering economic development (Elmohr et al., 2024). ...
October 2020
Organization Studies
... Contexts of social exclusion are characterized by pronounced social inequalities embedded within social norms, informal institutions, rules, and routines, which often manifest as institutionalized power imbalances (Bapuji & Chrispal, 2020;Bhatt et al., 2022;Qureshi et al., 2023a). For example, inherently unequal social or digital environments, such as those perpetuating ableism (Ameri et al., 2020) or normalizing stigmatization (Petter & Giddens, 2023), hinder digital inclusion by amplifying social biases. ...
March 2020
Journal of Business Ethics