Herausgeber/in:
Smith, Helen Lawton; Henry, Colette; Etzkowitz, Henry; Poulovassilis, Alexandra
Quelle: Cheltenham, UK; Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 2020.
Inhalt: Gender, Science and Innovation explores the contemporary challenges facing women scientists in academia and develops effective strategies to improve gender equality. Addressing an important gap in current knowledge, chapters offer a range of international perspectives from diverse contexts, countries and institutional settings. This book is an essential contribution to the literature for academics, researchers and policy makers concerned with improving gender equality in academia and seeking to learn from the experiences of others.
Schlagwörter:ADVANCE; Frauen in der Wissenschaft; Geschlechterverhältnis; geschlechtsspezifische Diskriminierung; Gleichstellungsmaßnahmen; Gleichstellungspolitik; Industrieforschung; Institution; Karriere; leaky pipeline; Medizin; Mentoring; Networking; Netzwerk; Norwegen; Technologie; USA
CEWS Kategorie:Hochschulen, Wissenschaft als Beruf, Geschlechterverhältnis, Gleichstellungspolitik
Dokumenttyp:Sammelwerk
Personal an Hochschulen 2019
Autor/in:
Statistisches Bundesamt
Quelle: Statistisches Bundesamt; Wiesbaden (Personal an Hochschulen, 11, 11), 2020.
Inhalt: Mit der vorliegenden Publikation wird die Fachserie 11, Reihe 4.4 „Personal an Hochschulen“ für das Berichtsjahr 2019 fortgeführt. Rechtsgrundlage der Erhebung ist das Gesetz über die Statistik für das Hochschulwesen (Hochschulstatistikgesetz - HStatG) vom 2. November 1990 (BGBl. I S. 2414), das durch Art. 1 des Gesetzes vom 2. März 2016 (BGBl. I S. 342) novelliert und teils ergänzt worden ist.
Schlagwörter:Habilitation; Hochschule; Hochschulpersonal; Statistik
CEWS Kategorie:Statistik und statistische Daten, Hochschulen
Casualised academic staff and the lecturer-student relationship: Shame, (Im)permanence and (Il)legitimacy
Autor/in:
Read, Barbara; Leathwood, Carole
Quelle: British Journal of Sociology of Education, 41 (2020) 4, S 539–554
Inhalt: This paper is based on findings from an email interview study with 20 academics (17 women, 3 men) in the UK on short-term, insecure or ‘casualised’ contracts. The paper focuses on their perceptions of the effect their contract status has on the lecturer/student relationship: particularly in regard to student perceptions of their legitimacy and status. Using a poststructuralist theoretical lens, we explore lecturers’ concerns or anxieties as to whether they may be interpreted as less legitimate than permanent staff; and the emotional labour involved in the work done to ‘cover’ for the difficulties that a lecturer’s contract status causes for the quality of their teaching content and organisation. We also explore the considerations of some participants to voluntarily ‘disclose’ their status to students and the possibilities of such acts as a form of resistance to dominant discourses of the legitimate academic.
The Intersection of Gender Identity and Violence: : Victimization Experienced by Transgender College Students
Autor/in:
Griner, Stacey B.; Vamos, Cheryl A.; Thompson, Erika L.; Logan, Rachel; Vázquez-Otero, Coralia; Daley, Ellen M.
Quelle: Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 35 (2020) 23-24, S 5704–5725
Inhalt: College students disproportionately experience victimization, stalking, and relationship violence when compared with other groups. Few studies explore victimization by the gender identity of college students, including those who identify as transgender. The purpose of this study is to explore the rates of violence experienced by transgender students compared with male and female college students. This study utilized the National College Health Assessment-II (NCHA-II) and included data from students (n = 82,538) across fall 2011, 2012, and 2013. Bivariate statistics and binary logistic regression were conducted to test the relationships between gender identity and victimization. Transgender students (n = 204) were compared with male (n = 27,322) and female (n = 55,012) students. After adjusting for individual factors, transgender students had higher odds of experiencing all nine types of violence when compared with males and higher odds of experiencing eight types of violence than females. Transgender students experienced the highest odds in crimes involving sexual victimization, including attempted sexual penetration (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 9.49, 95% confidence interval [CI] = [6.17, 14.59], d = 1.00), sexual penetration without consent (aOR: 9.06, 95% CI = [5.64, 14.53], d = 0.94), and being in a sexually abusive relationship (aOR: 6.48, 95% CI = [4.01, 10.49], d = 0.48), than did male students. Findings reveal increased odds of victimization among transgender students when compared with male and female students. Results demonstrate the need for more comprehensive violence prevention efforts in college settings.
Schlagwörter:gender identity; gender-based violence; higher education; sexual violence; Transgeschlechtlichkeit
CEWS Kategorie:Diversity, Hochschulen, Sexuelle Belästigung und Gewalt
Rewarding Collaborative Research: Role Congruity Bias and the Gender Pay Gap in Academe
Autor/in:
Wiedman, Christine
Quelle: Journal of Business Ethics (Journal of Business Ethics), 167 (2020) 4, S 793–807
Inhalt: Research on academic pay finds an unexplained gender pay gap that has not fully dissolved over time and that appears to increase with years of experience. In this study, I consider how role congruity bias contributes to this pay gap. Bias is more likely to manifest in a context where there is some ambiguity about performance and where stereotypes are stronger. I predict that bias in the attribution of credit for coauthored research leads to lower returns to research for female professors. To test this prediction, I use a sample of Canadian faculty in accounting, where research is typically coauthored, where females are underrepresented at the most senior ranks, and where many universities evaluate merit in research, teaching, and service to determine salary increases. In regressions of salary on individual and institutional determinants of salary, I find that women earn marginally less than men. However, the pay gap is only evident for women who publish in a selective list of journals; for the subset of faculty with no publications from this list, there are no significant differences in salary. For researching faculty, the pay gap relates specifically to research productivity. While women publish less on average than men, the returns to their research are also lower. In particular, the relation between the individual's research ranking and salary is significantly lower for women who publish a higher proportion of their work with men, than for all other faculty. Additional analysis of salary and coauthor patterns confirms that women receive significantly less credit for coauthored articles they publish with men than those they publish with other women but that no similar variations in reward are evident for men across publishing patterns. These findings suggest bias in the attribution of credit for coauthored research in the determination of salary, consistent with role congruity theory, and provide an important potential explanation for why salaries for women vary systematically from those of men even after considering productivity. Providing lower rewards for equal work represents a continuing ethical issue in academe and compounds the challenges women already facing in the profession.
Schlagwörter:authorship; biases against women; Canada; gender pay gap; Kanada; role conflict; wage gap
CEWS Kategorie:Hochschulen, Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung, Geschlechterverhältnis
Why is it so difficult to reduce gender inequality in male-dominated higher educational organizations? : A feminist institutional perspective
Autor/in:
O'Connor, Pat
Quelle: Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, 45 (2020) 2, S 207–228
Inhalt: Using a Feminist Institutional perspective, and drawing on a wide range of evidence in different institutions and countries, this article identifies the specific aspects of the structure and culture of male-dominated higher educational organizations that perpetuate gender inequality. Gender inequality refers to the differential evaluation of women and men, and of areas of predominantly female and predominantly male employment. It is reflected at a structural level in the under-representation of women in senior positions and at a cultural level in the legitimacy of a wide range of practices to value men and to facilitate their access to such positions and to undervalue women and to inhibit their access. It shows that even potentially transformative institutional interventions such as Athena SWAN have had little success in reducing gender inequality. It highlights the need to recognize the part played by the ‘normal’ structures and culture in perpetuating gender inequality.
Trans experiences of a university campus in northern England
Autor/in:
Mearns, Graeme W.; Bonner‐Thompson, Carl; Hopkins, Peter
Quelle: Area, 52 (2020) 3, S 488–494
Inhalt: The spatial experiences of transgender and gender non‐conforming (“trans”) people continue to occupy the margins of geography, especially compared to the amount of work centred on lesbian and gay lives. Though research on trans geographies in educational and health settings is expanding, most literatures stem from the USA. This paper shares findings from a study about the experiences of trans people who study and/or work on a specific university campus in northern England. Our findings demonstrate how particular spaces of the campus are generative of interactions which enable micro‐aggressions and misrecognition.
Quelle: Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education, 13 (2020) 2, S 175–192
Inhalt: We tested four proposed dimensions of a Culture Conducive to Women's Academic Success (CCWAS; i.e., supportive leadership, freedom from gender bias, equal access to opportunities, and support for work-life balance) on a sample of women faculty from Canadian Natural Sciences and Engineering (NSE) departments/units. The results of our serial and parallel mediation analysis confirmed the CCWAS dimensions, and further indicated that a positive NSE department/unit culture supports women's career satisfaction and may reduce their emotional exhaustion. Accordingly, our findings suggest that investing in local gender equity interventions to improve department/unit culture may be an effective way to improve women's experiences and help retain women in academic NSE positions, as a result. (As Provided).