Recent evidence consolidates a shift from purely representational approaches to qualified
diversity, in which gender diversity interacts with board independence to strengthen
monitoring capacity, transparency and stakeholder confidence (Gabaldon et al., 2020;
Labelle et al., 2021). Within European markets, new contributions indicate that boards
combining female representation with independence tend to align more closely with ESG
expectations and to exhibit stronger oversight effects, consistent with the monitoring role
emphasized in prior finance and governance research (Bernile, Bhagwat, & Yonker, 2018;
Adams & Ragunathan, 2023). These developments resonate with the Sandwich Effect
proposition, in which independent women operate at the intersection of regulatory
obligations and market‑signaling dynamics (Stoeckl & Luedicke, 2024; Martínez‑Jiménez
& Hernández‑Ortega, 2024).
Beyond academic work, international organizations have documented structural drivers
and institutional conditions that enable women’s effective participation in
decision‑making. The International Labour Organization (ILO), in its Women in Business
and Management: The Business Case for Change and subsequent global leadership
diagnostics, shows that gender‑balanced leadership is associated with stronger oversight,
greater transparency and lower reputational risk, particularly when board appointments
are conducted through transparent processes that safeguard independence and reduce
tokenism (ILO, 2019; ILO, 2022). These international models align with recent European
governance developments, which place independence criteria alongside diversity targets
and are increasingly read by markets as signals of governance quality and organizational
maturity (European Commission, 2024; ESMA, 2025). Taken together, this evidence
strengthens the conceptual logic of the Sandwich Effect by indicating that diversity is
most effective when paired with independence, thereby enhancing monitoring capacity
and stakeholder confidence (García‑Sánchez, Martínez‑Ferrero, & García‑Meca, 2021;
Hyun, Park, & Kim, 2023).
Consistent with this, the European framework has intensified incentives for substantive—
not merely symbolic—compliance. The gender balance directive and updated governance
codes raise the salience of independence criteria alongside diversity targets, which the
market increasingly reads as a proxy for governance quality and organizational maturity
(European Commission, 2024; ESMA, 2025). In parallel, international labour statistics
and leadership diagnostics underline the persistence of structural bottlenecks to women’s
advancement and highlight that sustained progress depends on transparent appointment
processes and independence safeguards—conditions that reduce tokenism and amplify
real oversight (International Labour Organization, 2024; Adams & Ragunathan, 2023).
Empirically, recent studies associate gender‑diverse and independence‑balanced boards
with better audit committee effectiveness, higher disclosure quality and lower earnings
management, supporting the view that independent female directors can carry
disproportionate governance effects (Sial, Zheng, & Cherian, 2023; McGuire &
Sheridan, 2023).
Overall, the 2020–2025 literature strengthens the conceptual foundations of the
Sandwich Effect: independent women directors act simultaneously as agents of
compliance with governance norms and as carriers of market signals linked to
transparency, legitimacy and sustainability orientation (García‑Sánchez,
Martínez‑Ferrero, & García‑Meca, 2021; Hyun, Park, & Kim, 2023). Incorporating these
updated perspectives aligns the article with contemporary European and international