Autor/in:
Lynn, Freda B.; Noonan, Mary C.; Sauder, Michael; Andersson, Matthew A.
Quelle: Social Forces, 98 (2019) 2, S 518–547
Inhalt: In academia, women trail men in nearly every major professional reward, such as earnings, publications, and funding. Bibliometric studies, however, suggest that citations are unique with regard to gender inequality: female penalties have been reported, but gender parity or even female premiums are routinely documented as well. Two questions follow from this puzzle. First, does gender matter for citations in sociology and neighboring social science disciplines? No theoretically informed study of gender and citations exists for the social science core. We begin to fill this gap by analyzing roughly 10,000 publications in economics, political science, and sociology. In contrast to many big data studies, we estimate the effect of author gender on citations alongside other author-, article-, journal-, and (sub)field-level predictors. Our results strongly suggest that when male and female authors publish articles that are comparably positioned to receive citations, their publications do in fact accrue citations at the same rate. This finding raises a second question: Why would gender matter “everywhere but here”? We hypothesize that the answer is related to the mechanisms (e.g., self-selection, biased assessments of commitment) that are activated in the context of some professional rewards but not citations. We discuss why a null gender finding should not be discarded as an anomaly but rather approached as an analytical opportunity.
Nachgefragt:Wie viel Zeit braucht eine wissenschaftliche Karriere=
Autor/in:
Roth, Claudia
Quelle: WZB Mitteilungen, (2019) 166, S 21–23
Inhalt: Zeit ist auch in der Wissenschaft eine wertvolle Ressource. Wir haben uns unter Forschenden am WZB nach ihren Arbeitszeiten erkundigt und sie gefragt, ob Teilzeit, Kinder und Karriere zusammengehen. Dabei haben wir auch von Ar-beitsbergen, liebsten Arbeitszeiten und unliebsamen Zeitfressern erfahren.
Supporting women scholars’ paths to academia : An examination of family-friendly policies of public affairs doctoral programs
Autor/in:
Bodkin, Candice Pippin; Fleming, Casey J.
Quelle: Journal of Public Affairs Education, 27 (2019) 2, S 1–25
Inhalt: Despite earning roughly half the doctoral degrees in public administration, women remain underrepresented in public affairs programs, particularly in senior positions. Studies describe a leaky pipeline from which women exit the academic career, and there is growing interest in removing administrative, structural, and cultural barriers facing women scholars as well as supporting healthy career-life balance. Considerable research examines family-friendly workplace initiatives for faculty, yet little attention is paid to the availability of such policies for students. Drawing from archival and survey data, this study investigates the availability of specific family-friendly policies for doctoral students of public affairs programs in the U.S., potentially effective human resource management approaches to addressing exit points between graduate school and faculty membership. Findings reveal inconsistent and relatively insubstantial provision of formal policies; however, informal workarounds appear to be a common strategy for meeting the needs of graduate students who become parents during doctoral studies.
How to banish manels and manferences from scientific meetings
Autor/in:
Else, Holly
Quelle: Nature, 573 (2019) 7773, S 184–186
Inhalt: A Nature analysis finds that several fields of science are moving away from male-dominated conferences and panels — but it’s easy to slip back into old habits.
Schlagwörter:Geschlechterverteilung; Konferenz; Teilhabe; USA
CEWS Kategorie:Wissenschaft als Beruf, Gleichstellungspolitik
Every Woman Has a Story to Tell : Experiential Reflections on Leadership in Higher Education
Autor/in:
Selzer, Robin Arnsperger; Robles, Richard
Quelle: Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education, 12 (2019) 1, S 106–124
Inhalt: This study explores and shares key professional development advice related to career paths, challenges faced, and lessons learned from senior women leaders at a public, urban, research university. Interviews were conducted as part the NASPA Alice Manicur Symposium, a national student affairs leadership development program for women. Findings identified two themes at the personal and institutional levels. Sub-themes included strategies for career advancement in higher education, such as accepting opportunities, being visible, understanding the business of higher education, and obtaining a terminal degree. Aspiring women should be ready to navigate institutional challenges, often outside of their control, such as bureaucracy and politics, budgetary constraints, forces impacting student affairs, and institutional change. Participants shared perspectives on addressing institutional change including assessing needs and affect, exploring perceptions of change, gaining buy-in, and leveraging the change. Because emerging women leaders in higher education are often overwhelmed and confused in the realm of career assessment, findings from this study address the problem. The needle can move for women in higher education leadership positions if women identify themselves as aspiring leaders, create time for career assessment reflection, and take action to implement strategies for advancement endorsed by successful senior women.
Schlagwörter:Change Management; Frauen in der Wissenschaft; Frauen in Führungspositionen; higher education; Karrierebarriere; Management; Organisationskultur; structural barriers
CEWS Kategorie:Berufsbiographie und Karriere, Wissenschaft als Beruf
Work–life balance for native and migrant scholars in German academia : Meanings and practices
Autor/in:
Gewinner, Irina
Quelle: Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: An International Journal, (2019)
Inhalt: The purpose of this paper is to address notions and practices relating to work–life balance for native German scholars and researchers who have migrated from the former Soviet Union (FSU). Issues will be explored from a cultural perspective, identifying culturally based interpretations of work–life balance.
Schlagwörter:caregiving; culture-sensitive approach; Diversity; german academia; motherhood; native and migrant scholars; Vereinbarkeit; WissenschaflerIn; work-life balance
CEWS Kategorie:Wissenschaft als Beruf, Vereinbarkeit Familie-Beruf
Quelle: Gender Work Organ (Gender, Work & Organization), 46 (2019) 2, 411 S
Inhalt: Despite increasing geographic mobility among academic staff, gendered patterns of involvement in academic mobility have largely escaped scrutiny. Positioned within literatures on internationalization, physical proximity, gender and parenthood in academic mobility and understandings of gender as a process enacted through both discursive and embodied practices, we use discourse analysis based on interviews with academics in New Zealand to examine differences in language that create differing realities with regards to gender and obligations of care in academic mobility decisions. The findings reveal how academic mobility is discursively formulated as ‘essential’ to successful academic careers, with the need for frequent travel justified despite advances in virtual communication technologies. Heteronormative discourses are shown to disrupt and fragment the opportunities female academics have to engage in academic mobility. However, we also uncover ways in which these discourses are resisted, wherein fathers articulate emotional strain associated with academic mobility. The article shows how discourse works to constitute the essentialization of academic mobility, and the uneven gendered practices associated with it, whilst also giving voice to gender inequities in academic mobility from the southern hemisphere.
Exklusiv: akademischer Alltag im deutschsprachigen Universitätsroman : Eine gendersensible praxeologische Analyse
Autor/in:
Deigert, Sabrina
Quelle: GENDER (GENDER – Zeitschrift für Geschlecht, Kultur und Gesellschaft), 11 (2019) 1-2019, S 63–77
Inhalt: nwiefern können Universitätsromane Auskunft über die Verschränkung von Doing Science und Doing Gender im akademischen Alltag geben? Aufbauend auf Bourdieus Feldkonzept gehe ich dieser Frage anhand einer gendersensiblen praxeologischen Analyse von sechs zeitgenössischen deutschsprachigen Universitätsromanen nach. Zwei hervorgehobene Romanbeispiele zu den Praktikenkomplexen Gremienarbeit und informelle Zusammentreffen verweisen auf das Erkenntnispotenzial dieser Literatur für wissenschaftssoziologische Forschung. Doch müssen die Romane gleichzeitig selbst als distinktive kulturelle Praxis gelesen werden, durch die Wissenschaftlerinnen performativ fachliche Eignung abgesprochen wird.
“I Want to be Both, but Is that Possible?”: : Communicating Mother-Scholar Uncertainty During Doctoral Candidacy
Autor/in:
Abetz, Jenna S.
Quelle: Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education, 12 (2019) 1, S 70–87
Inhalt: Doctoral study is a vulnerable time when students are faced with the task of establishing a new professional identity in a competitive environment, with financial stress, an uncertain future, and low status. This significant period of uncertainty is a particularly ripe context for higher education researchers to explore, as it simultaneously falls during important family formation and childbearing years. Through in-depth, semistructured interviews of 30 married women doctoral candidates, largely within the humanities and social sciences and the lens of uncertainty management theory, this investigation examines how women construct and manage uncertainty surrounding the mother-scholar identity.
Schlagwörter:motherhood; mother-scholar; Professor; Promotionsphase; women in higher education; work-life balance
CEWS Kategorie:Wissenschaft als Beruf, Vereinbarkeit Familie-Beruf
Verwandtschaftsverhältnisse – Geschlechterverhältnisse im 21. Jahrhundert
Autor/in:
Goldan, Lea
Quelle: GENDER (GENDER – Zeitschrift für Geschlecht, Kultur und Gesellschaft), 11 (2019) 2-2019, S 102–120
Inhalt: Die bisherige Promoviertenforschung deutet darauf hin, dass Frauen monetär weniger vom Erwerb eines Doktortitels profitieren als Männer. Daher werden im vorliegenden Beitrag erstmals das Ausmaß und die Ursachen geschlechtsbezogener Lohnunterschiede unter Promovierten in Deutschland untersucht. Es wird erwartet, dass sich promovierte Frauen und Männer hinsichtlich ihrer Studienfachwahl und Beschäftigungsmerkmale unterscheiden. Auf der Grundlage des DZHW-Absolventenpanels 2001 werden die Brutto-Stundenlöhne zehn Jahre nach Studienabschluss mittels OLS-Regression und Oaxaca-Blinder-Dekomposition untersucht. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass die Stundenlöhne von promovierten Frauen um 16,3 Prozent geringer sind als diejenigen von promovierten Männern. Diese Lohnunterschiede sind zu zwei Dritteln darauf zurückzuführen, dass promovierte Frauen häufiger Fächer mit einem hohen Frauenanteil studiert haben, nach ihrem Studium weniger Berufserfahrung sammeln und seltener Leitungspositionen innehaben als promovierte Männer.