Zinn, IsabelleIsabelleZinnHofmeister, HeatherHeatherHofmeister2024-11-192024-11-1920220958-923610.24451/arbor.20177https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.2017710.1080/09589236.2022.2115019https://arbor.bfh.ch/handle/arbor/35276In this article, we elaborate an integrative framework of the gender order that considers gender as something simultaneously structurally outside of individual action and as constantly done through interaction. Combining a structural perspective with micro-interactionist accounts makes it possible to show how these mechanisms manifest themselves and how individuals engage with and concretely ‘do gender’ in situ. We focus on three mechanisms through which the gender order emphasizes difference and creates inequality: androcentrism, agentic masculinity, and female devaluation. We illustrate our elaboration of the gender order with empirical evidence from two dramatically different male-dominated employment settings, meat-processing and higher education, in Switzerland and Germany, respectively.enStructure and agencygender inequalityandrocentrismmale dominancefemale devaluationmeat- processinghigher educationagentic masculinityHMThe gender order in action: consistent evidence from two distinct workplace settings-article