| Literature DB >> 32043918 |
Michelle I Cardel1, Emily Dhurandhar2, Ceren Yarar-Fisher3, Monica Foster4, Bertha Hidalgo5, Leslie A McClure6, Sherry Pagoto7, Nathanial Brown8, Dori Pekmezi9, Noha Sharafeldin10, Amanda L Willig11, Christine Angelini12.
Abstract
Despite significant progress in recent decades, the recruitment, advancement, and promotion of women in academia remain low. Women represent a large portion of the talent pool in academia, and receive >50% of all PhDs, but this has not yet translated into sustained representation in faculty and leadership positions. Research indicates that women encounter numerous "chutes" that remove them from academia or provide setbacks to promotion at all stages of their careers. These include the perception that women are less competent and their outputs of lesser quality, implicit bias in teaching evaluations and grant funding decisions, and lower citation rates. This review aims to (1) synthesize the "chutes" that impede the careers of women faculty, and (2) provide feasible recommendations, or "ladders" for addressing these issues at all career levels. Enacting policies that function as "ladders" rather than "chutes" for academic women is essential to even the playing field, achieve gender equity, and foster economic, societal, and cultural benefits of academia.Entities:
Keywords: gender equity; implicit bias; pay gap
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32043918 PMCID: PMC7247039 DOI: 10.1089/jwh.2019.8027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Womens Health (Larchmt) ISSN: 1540-9996 Impact factor: 2.681