In this article, the authors analyze inequalities between different groups of employees at a housing
company in a larger Swedish city. The concept of inequality regime is taken as a point of departure.
The purposes of the article are three: first, to add to knowledge of how inequality is generated
at an organizational level at specific workplaces; second, to contribute to the understanding of
how different practices, processes, and meanings of inequality regimes may interact to create and
reinforce inequalities between natives and immigrants; and, third, to contribute to the empirical
usefulness of the concept of inequality regime by demonstrating how it can be operationalized
and combined with other concepts in the analysis. The study shows how the practices, processes,
and meanings at the given workplace generated and reproduced different kinds of inequalities:
unequal wages, an ethnic division of labor, unequal influence and job security, and unequal opportunities
to capitalize on useful skills (i.e., language competence). Important conclusions are that
different kinds of inequalities may reinforce each other by creating vicious circles, and subtler forms
of inequality may partly explain explicit wage inequalities.
Author Biographies
Kristina Bor?us, Institute for Housing and Urban Research, Uppsala University
Professor
Ulf M?rkenstam, Department of Political Science, Stockholm University