A Statistical Analysis of Gender inequality in French academia
Autor/in:
Latour, Emmanuelle; LeFeuvre, Nicky
Quelle: Institut für Politikwissenschaft, FB 06 Erziehungswissenschaft und Sozialwissenschaften, Universität Münster; Münster (Training paper / Women in European Universities, Research and Training Network), 2004.
She figures 2003 : women and science - statistics and indicators
Herausgeber/in:
Generaldirektion Forschung Direktion L Wissenschaft, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, Europäische Kommission
Quelle: Generaldirektion Forschung Direktion L Wissenschaft, Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft, Europäische Kommission; Luxembourg: Amt f. amtl. Veröff. d. Europ. Gemeinschaften (She figures), 2003. 114 S.
Frauen in den ingenieur- und naturwissenschaftlichen Studiengängen : Bericht der BLK vom 2. Mai 2002
Herausgeber/in:
Bund-Länder-Kommission für Bildungsplanung und Forschungsförderung
Quelle: Bund-Länder-Kommission für Bildungsplanung und Forschungsförderung; Bonn (Materialien zur Bildungsplanung und zur Forschungsförderung, H. 100), 2002. 143 S.
Quelle: Institut für Politikwissenschaft, FB 06 Erziehungswissenschaft und Sozialwissenschaften, Universität Münster; Münster (Training paper / Women in European Universities, Research and Training Network), 2002. 88 S.
Inhalt: "The present paper consists of a statistical analysis of the situation of women in academia in Poland. It will bring to completion a first training paper published in the framework of the Women in European Universities Network. That first paper aimed to present an overview of the Polish education system by focusing on current mutations (marketisation, financial reform, ) and career track. The paper stressed the following main facts: that the private sector is becoming more and more important, that the increase in the number of students was not followed by a similar increase in the number of academic staff, that Polish academia is, on a European scale, quite feminised, but that women are rare in the top-ranking positions. Moreover, the economic transformation led to a drop in the living standards of academic staff, whereas at the same time there appeared new opportunities in the private sector. The brain drain from the public to the private sector was mostly a male affair. So one could also analyse the above-mentioned feminisation from a very pessimistic perspective - according to Renata Siemienska (2000), women should be regarded as 'winners among losers'. In this second training paper we will analyse the current situation of women in academia and the evolution of the proportion of women among students and professors since the 70's. This study presents figures at the national and institutional level and is mainly based on data collected by the Central Office of Statistics (GUS). The aim is to clarify the impact of recent transformations on the situation of women in academia, and above all to enlighten the mechanism of the glass ceiling. This part of the research in progress allows us to sort higher education institutions according to the proportion of women among professors, and the feminisation process in general. These proportions could be regarded as indications of best and worse practices and thus help us to define a sample for the forthcoming case studies. Besides that, on the basis of problems we faced in collecting and analysing the data, we will propose some recommendations aiming at improving the gender sensitivity of Polish data. All the results presented in this paper must be regarded as hypotheses that will be subject to further analysis through a questionnaire survey and case studies. The paper is divided into four parts. The first deals with the quality of data available, the second proposes an overview of the women's situation in studentship, the third part will be dedicated to an analysis of the body of professors and the last part to the verification of common hypotheses concerning the structural determination of feminisation in academia." (author's abstract)
Schlagwörter:Statistik; Wissenschaftler; Akademikerin; Polen; postsozialistisches Land
CEWS Kategorie:Geschlechterverhältnis, Hochschulen, Statistik und statistische Daten
Dokumenttyp:Monographie
Women's employment in the sciences in Europe
Autor/in:
Glover, Judith
Quelle: Journal of women and minorities in science and engineering, Vol. 8 (2002) No. 3-4, S. 363-375
Inhalt: "The current situation of women in scientific education and employment in European Union and applicant countries shows patterns of vertical and horizontal segregation. Yet the data that underpin these analyses are patchy, and despite some efforts to reuse available data, there is a clear need for new data, an effort that is gathering momentum in the European Commission (EC) and other pan-European bodies. However, new data collection requires major resourcing and for this to happen, various actors need to be convinced that the 'women and science problem' matters. Various arguments can be found in the literature about why the issue is seen to matter, and here, the author focuses particularly on a recent rationale in the EC, the 'science and society' perspective. However, if women, as agents, persist in retreating from science, the reasons behind the phenomena shown up in the available data need to be much more closely examined, in terms of the structures and institutions of scientific education and employment." (author's abstract)
CEWS Kategorie:Europa und Internationales, Arbeitswelt und Arbeitsmarkt, Naturwissenschaft und Technik, Statistik und statistische Daten
Dokumenttyp:Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Women in higher education in Europe : a statistical overview
Autor/in:
Mischau, Anina
Quelle: International journal of sociology and social policy, Vol. 21 (2001) No. 1/2, S. 20-31
Inhalt: "Looking back it becomes obvious that in most European countries (and this is true
for non-European countries too) the world of academia was a purely male world. Access
to higher education was restricted exclusively to men, and faculties at the universities
were completely dominated by men. For a long time women described the development
of universities and the situation of women in higher education as a history of discrimination
and conscious exclusion of women by men. Nowadays, academia is not a male world anymore.
Nevertheless, we still discover inequality between men and women in higher education.
The following paper is focused on questions like: How does the situation of women
at universities look like in Europe? What does inequality mean today? How has this
situation changed in recent years? Which national measures to improve the situation
of women have been initiated in recent years, and have they proved to be successful?
As an overview, some of these questions should be answered in a comparative way for
selected countries in Europe. At certain points some remarks will be given on the
situation in Germany, the country from which the author comes and the structure and
development she knows best." (author's abstract)|