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Intersectionality in corporate South Africa: the experiences of African black female leaders

Research on gender inequality focuses on the two main biases against women: (1) agentic deficiency (perceptions that women have minimal leadership potential); and (2) agentic penalty (a backlash against counter-stereotypical behaviour from certain women). There has generally been an assumption that...

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Main Author: Mbatha, Siphiwe Wendy
Other Authors: April, Kurt
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2025
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mbatha, Siphiwe Wendy
author2 April, Kurt
author_browse April, Kurt
Mbatha, Siphiwe Wendy
author_facet April, Kurt
Mbatha, Siphiwe Wendy
author_sort Mbatha, Siphiwe Wendy
collection Thesis
description Research on gender inequality focuses on the two main biases against women: (1) agentic deficiency (perceptions that women have minimal leadership potential); and (2) agentic penalty (a backlash against counter-stereotypical behaviour from certain women). There has generally been an assumption that the stereotypes upon which these biases are based are comparable for women across racial groups. South Africa, despite having significant racial and ethnic diversity, suffers from a lack of research that targets respondents by race and gender. This naïve gender-biased approach does not fully consider the critical intersectional differences that exist for women. In studies specific to South Africa, the lenses of both race and gender are often used to examine the perceptions of women as leaders. These views, which are limited to only gender and race, do not completely represent Black women, however, because gender intersections introduce simultaneous processes for identity and interdependent systems of disadvantage. These theories also do not elaborate on the lived experiences of South African Black women in corporate leadership roles. The researcher conducted a qualitative research study and interviewed 25 Black females who held various senior leadership positions in different industries in South Africa. The researcher applied a hermeneutic phenomenological approach to uncover the lived experiences of the group of respondents. The aim was to document their lived experiences and establish how those experiences related to constructs from existing literature on the leadership dynamics of race, gender, class, and intersectionality. The research findings capture the essence of the lived experiences of professional Black females and provide context as to why there continues to be a gap in the representation of this group in senior leadership positions, despite the efforts of affirmative action policies from the government. The findings highlight and demonstrate how this group is challenged and sometimes held back by the dynamics of intersectionality, class, race, gender, and other processes of identity. The research goes on to describe further research opportunities on how identity and interdependent systems of disadvantage impact Black female leadership performance over time. There is an opportunity to further explore how human resource policies and educational frameworks can contribute towards harnessing and developing this group, to increase their capacity and greater participation in senior- and executive-level roles.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41726
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:37:01.253Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr Graduate School of Business (GSB)
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41726 Intersectionality in corporate South Africa: the experiences of African black female leaders Mbatha, Siphiwe Wendy April, Kurt African black female leadership gender inequality hermeneutic phenomenological approach intersectionality lived experiences racial and ethnic diversity Research on gender inequality focuses on the two main biases against women: (1) agentic deficiency (perceptions that women have minimal leadership potential); and (2) agentic penalty (a backlash against counter-stereotypical behaviour from certain women). There has generally been an assumption that the stereotypes upon which these biases are based are comparable for women across racial groups. South Africa, despite having significant racial and ethnic diversity, suffers from a lack of research that targets respondents by race and gender. This naïve gender-biased approach does not fully consider the critical intersectional differences that exist for women. In studies specific to South Africa, the lenses of both race and gender are often used to examine the perceptions of women as leaders. These views, which are limited to only gender and race, do not completely represent Black women, however, because gender intersections introduce simultaneous processes for identity and interdependent systems of disadvantage. These theories also do not elaborate on the lived experiences of South African Black women in corporate leadership roles. The researcher conducted a qualitative research study and interviewed 25 Black females who held various senior leadership positions in different industries in South Africa. The researcher applied a hermeneutic phenomenological approach to uncover the lived experiences of the group of respondents. The aim was to document their lived experiences and establish how those experiences related to constructs from existing literature on the leadership dynamics of race, gender, class, and intersectionality. The research findings capture the essence of the lived experiences of professional Black females and provide context as to why there continues to be a gap in the representation of this group in senior leadership positions, despite the efforts of affirmative action policies from the government. The findings highlight and demonstrate how this group is challenged and sometimes held back by the dynamics of intersectionality, class, race, gender, and other processes of identity. The research goes on to describe further research opportunities on how identity and interdependent systems of disadvantage impact Black female leadership performance over time. There is an opportunity to further explore how human resource policies and educational frameworks can contribute towards harnessing and developing this group, to increase their capacity and greater participation in senior- and executive-level roles. 2025-09-09T07:54:10Z 2025-09-09T07:54:10Z 2025 2025-09-09T07:42:54Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41726 en eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce Universiy of Cape Town
spellingShingle African black female leadership
gender inequality
hermeneutic phenomenological approach
intersectionality
lived experiences
racial and ethnic diversity
Mbatha, Siphiwe Wendy
Intersectionality in corporate South Africa: the experiences of African black female leaders
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Intersectionality in corporate South Africa: the experiences of African black female leaders
title_full Intersectionality in corporate South Africa: the experiences of African black female leaders
title_fullStr Intersectionality in corporate South Africa: the experiences of African black female leaders
title_full_unstemmed Intersectionality in corporate South Africa: the experiences of African black female leaders
title_short Intersectionality in corporate South Africa: the experiences of African black female leaders
title_sort intersectionality in corporate south africa the experiences of african black female leaders
topic African black female leadership
gender inequality
hermeneutic phenomenological approach
intersectionality
lived experiences
racial and ethnic diversity
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41726
work_keys_str_mv AT mbathasiphiwewendy intersectionalityincorporatesouthafricatheexperiencesofafricanblackfemaleleaders