Difference between revisions of "Gender bias in the Online Job Search"

From SI410
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
Gender bias refers to the “unfair difference” in the way that both men and women are treated <ref name=biasDefinition>Cambridge Dictionary.(n.d.).<i> gender bias</i>. [https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/gender-bias https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/gender-bias]</ref>. In the context of the online job search, this refers to the advantage male job seekers have in the online versus female job seekers. The advancement of technology and big data has led to companies recruiting and hiring potential employees through the use of big data and artificial intelligence <ref name=paulineKim>Kim, P. T. (2019). Big data and artificial intelligence: New challenges for workplace equality. University of Louisville Law Review, 57(2), 313-328.</ref>. The use of algorithms in the job search process can perpetuate existing biases which raise ethical concerns regarding opportunities for females being blocked, and how systematic gender roles are disadvantaging female job seekers.  
+
Gender bias refers to the “unfair difference” in the way that both men and women are treated <ref name=biasDefinition>Cambridge Dictionary.(n.d.).<i> gender bias</i>. [https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/gender-bias https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/gender-bias]</ref>. In the context of the online job search, this refers to the advantage male job seekers have versus female job seekers. The advancement of technology and big data has led to companies recruiting and hiring potential employees through the use of big data and artificial intelligence <ref name=paulineKim>Kim, P. T. (2019). Big data and artificial intelligence: New challenges for workplace equality. University of Louisville Law Review, 57(2), 313-328.</ref>. The use of algorithms in the job search process can perpetuate existing biases which raise ethical concerns regarding opportunities for females being blocked, and how systematic gender roles are disadvantaging female job seekers.  
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Revision as of 12:01, 12 March 2021

Gender bias refers to the “unfair difference” in the way that both men and women are treated [1]. In the context of the online job search, this refers to the advantage male job seekers have versus female job seekers. The advancement of technology and big data has led to companies recruiting and hiring potential employees through the use of big data and artificial intelligence [2]. The use of algorithms in the job search process can perpetuate existing biases which raise ethical concerns regarding opportunities for females being blocked, and how systematic gender roles are disadvantaging female job seekers.

References

  1. Cambridge Dictionary.(n.d.). gender bias. https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/gender-bias
  2. Kim, P. T. (2019). Big data and artificial intelligence: New challenges for workplace equality. University of Louisville Law Review, 57(2), 313-328.