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Item type:Publication, Yes, We Comply, but Do We Include?: The Employment Disability Challenge(Common Ground Research Networks, 2025) ;Mucharraz y Cano, Yvette ;Aleman-Castilla, Benjamin ;Dávila-Ruiz, DianaCuilty-Esquive, KarlaWhile organizations struggle to find talent to be sustainable, persons with disabilities (PWD) struggle to enter and remain in the labor market. This study aims to explore the discrepancy between businesses’ readiness to incorporate PWD and the actual integration of this population. By employing a literature review and econometric analysis, including generalized linear models, this study examines the impact of Mexican standards and other factors on the inclusion of PWD in firms. The findings are grounded in the social model of disability, which proposes six hypotheses related to overcoming organizational barriers that result in a conceptual proposal of four key variables that could foster a more successful integration of PWD from recruitment to long-term employment, namely accessibility standards, assistive technology, compliance with Mexican standard frameworks, and the formulation and enforcement of human resources policies or programs. The conceptual framework also outlines the importance of considering and managing organizational ethics of care to prepare organizations for the inclusion of PWD. This study introduces the term “anapirophobia” to describe nonacceptance of disability. By identifying and addressing “anapirophobia,” it is possible to influence the workplace atmosphere for the inclusion of persons with disabilities. The results indicate that despite companies perceiving themselves as being prepared for the inclusion of PWD and compliant with regulations, this does not necessarily result in actual employment or support for the development of PWD. ©The authors ©The International Journal of Organizational Diversity ©Common Ground Research Networks. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Burnout resilience in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic(Instituto Tecnologico de Costa Rica, Business School, 2024) ;Mucharraz y Cano, Yvette ;Dávila-Ruiz, DianaCuilty-Esquivel, KarlaThe COVID-19 pandemic had an unprecedented negative impact on women’s mental well-being, especially on mothers. This article proposes the concept of “burnout resilience” and introduces “structural support” as a variable that influences job burnout in women, mothers working in executive positions. Different support measures may promote resilience: in this case, the structural, organizational, and family-related. The study focuses on resilience enablers in a disaster scenario like the COVID-19 pandemic. The study highlights the relevance for public policy and organizations of ensuring organizational and structural support that contributes to develop resilience for mitigating burnout, especially during natural catastrophe periods and war environments, among other negative scenarios. The investigation aimed to quantify job burnout among 704 executive mothers during the COVID-19 pandemic, using the Maslach Burnout Inventory General survey. The data-collection method employed was a non-probabilistic snowball sampling technique, and the hypotheses were tested using a comparison of means t-test and one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Results showed the relationship between job burnout and organizational, familial, and structural support. The findings also reveal that organizational and structural support attenuated burnout, while familial support is not correlated with burnout mitigation. Moreover, compared to the pre-pandemic period, executive mothers seemed to have experienced an increase in burnout during the COVID-19 pandemic. ©The authors ©Business School, Instituto Tecnologico de Costa Rica.17 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, COVID-19: An Opportunity to Explore Hybrid Work(Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2023) ;Mucharraz y Cano, Yvette ;Dávila-Ruiz, Diana ;Murcio Rodríguez, RicardoCuilty-Esquivel, KarlaOrganizations need to rebuild themselves after the Great Confinement, and this chapter aims to analyze and address the effects of work during the lockdown and the characteristics of hybrid work by deconstructing the elements that led to its development and positioning. The background of work-from-home schemes during the COVID-19 crisis is discussed, acknowledging the challenges involved when these schemes were pushed to the limit. We propose to define hybrid work as the combination of work in and outside the office, where space, time, and home intersect thanks to the use of technology. This chapter presents a review and discussion of the human, technological, and organizational levers of the emergent hybrid work schemes as experienced by companies and their employees during the pandemic. Besides the approach to defining the concept, the intended contribution is to put “hybrid work” into practice in organizations and highlight its importance in talent attraction and retention. ©The authors ©Palgrave Macmillan, Cham.7 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Minute Zero(2021)Mucharraz y Cano, YvetteLearning outcomes: The expected learning outcomes are: to clarify the meaning of resilience and its attributes. To explore the influence of the leader on the development of organizational resilience. To identify critical decisions for the recovery of a business after an external event such as the earthquake that took place on September 19th in Mexico City. To point out the stages for the development of organizational resilience, in the short, and long term: anticipation, coping and adaptation. To clarify the actions that could be taken to prepare an organization for an extreme event or respond to a large-scale crisis. Case overview/synopsis: The case is framed within the context of the September 19, 2017 earthquake in Mexico City. ProActive Strategies’ offices collapsed, causing some people to lose their lives and others to be injured. The protagonist needed to decide if the organization could survive and recover or needed to be closed after the earthquake. After ProActive Strategies survived and recovered, it was possible to identify the main stages to develop organizational resilience in this organization: anticipation, coping and adaptation. Also, the paper provides empirical evidence about how organizational resilience is anchored in the attributes at individual and community levels that include human, economic, social and political capitals, enhanced by technological capital. Furthermore, the enablers of resilience add external entities and the ecosystem at a macro-level, considering political, social and economic aspects of the context. Complexity academic level: The study level and expertise required to address this case is medium. The richness of the discussion from the perspective of the students is related to the possibility to empathize with the protagonist and the different actors involved and to build on previous experience with crisis management to observe the potential risks and courses of action. Moreover, the professor also requires taking a neutral position to balance the requirements from a humanitarian perspective, with the business needs.57 2 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, The geography of organizational change: A critical review(2021)Mucharraz y Cano, YvetteThis paper explores the role of geography in relation to the theories on organizational resilience. Prior studies have addressed the construct of disaster in relation to place and community resilience in supporting the development of sustainable livelihoods, but the application of geography to organizations in the context of disasters remains unexplored. This critical review examines this emerging concept in context. In doing so, it delineates three levels of understanding embedded in the construct: subject, organization, and context. It helps explore the intangible elements that may mirror organizational place and space, where the organizational structure becomes fundamentally challenged in a disaster situation. This review calls into question the role of agency and ethical decisions of leaders – and those who hold emergent leadership roles – helping to re-construct power asymmetries that are revealed in disaster settings, assuring that individuals and livelihoods are bolstered in existing geographies.Scopus© Citations 1 14 1 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Burnout effect on working mothers in leadership positions during the COVID-19 lockdown(2023) ;Mucharraz y Cano, Yvette ;Dávila Ruiz, DianaCuilty Esquivel, KarlaPurpose: This study aims to understand how the recent COVID-19 pandemic impacted burnout levels among working mothers in leadership positions and how income and work schemes play an important role in their burnout. Design/methodology/approach: Data were collected from 961 working mothers and fathers in leadership positions in Mexico under different work schemes during the COVID-19 lockdown. Snowball sampling was used in this study. The Maslach Burnout Inventory General Survey was distributed online, using the burnout scale, with income and work schemes as categorical variables.Scopus© Citations 5 12 7
