The Impact of Institutional Influences on HRM Practices and Women’s Workplace Experiences in Saudi Private Sector Organisations
Abstract
This study examines how formal and informal institutions shape women’s
workplace experiences and the extent to which organisations in Saudi Arabia are
developing their HRM policies and practices (recruitment, promotion, training,
pay and working conditions) to respond to labour legislation and whether women
perceive the working environment as supportive of them.
Through the lens of institutional theory, a qualitative case study design was
adopted. Data were collected via semi-structured interviews with 36 employees
and 8 managers in two private sector organisations, one Saudi-owned, with a
segregated working environment and the other international, with a mixed
working environment.
The findings show that institutions including regulatory authorities, and
organisations’ own policies and practices gave opportunities to women and
provided privileges and protections to mothers. However, women’s experiences
of employment differed in relation to equality with men, the extent and
effectiveness of women’s voice, and organisations’ supportiveness of female
employees, with those working in the Saudi organisation perceiving less equality
and more constraints. In both organisations, women’s behaviour, experiences and
work life balance were affected by the informal institutional influence of cultural
norms and expectations.
Through the use of an institutional lens, the study contributes to an understanding
of the factors influencing women’s position in organisations, within Saudi
Arabia. A gender perspective contributes to an area often neglected in
institutional theory. The study also highlights informal institutional influences
(culture, family and religion) which are often overlooked in Western studies. In
so doing, it provides insights into the way in which organisation policies,
practices and environments reflect interaction, and sometimes conflict between
formal and informal institutions, simultaneously reinforcing and subverting
efforts to improve the position of woman.