Many of you have seen this devastating essay on sexism in the academy, but here's a thread. It's interesting, and more forthright and radical on the topic than we are accustomed to in economics. nplusonemag.com/issue-34/essay…
Overall, women's progress in the academy has stalled, and the proportion of black women among tenured US faculty has fallen since 1993, according to one study.
The author: Misogyny is only part of the problem, the rest is the "banal sexist practices" of 3 groups of men: male scholars, male students, and male romantic partners.
Mechanisms in the scholarly disadvantage of women: men's preference for men (as colleagues, coauthors, mentees, etc), male skepticism about women's abilities, sexual harassment.
Women (especially black women) are constantly required to "prove it again", held to higher standards in publication, funding, and teaching, and see their work go un-cited.
An aside: Important to note that we (and the author) are not speculating here. There is a large body of rigorous empirical research supporting the existence of pervasive gender discrimination in the academy. The work of @HeatherSarson, @erinhengel and other econs are cited here.
Male students demand extensive preparation and maternal attention from female instructors, settle for charisma from male teachers. Asian women are punished most harshly for providing insufficient mothering.
Male partners prioritize their own careers at the expense of their partner's, are seldom willing to sacrifice to promote her success, refuse to share domestic responsibilities, but "exploit well-intentioned policies for young parents."
Solutions? Exhortations, training, or calls for increased awareness are unlikely to be successful in the face of deep-rooted, largely unconscious (and unacknowledged) sexist behavior.
Author calls for quotas (an efficient way to enforce equal opportunity when discriminatory personnel practices are imperfectly observed) and institutional change that disrupts the operation of exclusionary informal networks. jstor.org/stable/2937919…
Disrupting networks is difficult: putting women in more powerful positions helps, but leads to increased workload for women and the devaluation of roles that are interpreted as service providers rather than power sources when held by women.
"Power seems to follow men, whose informal networks easily slink into the shadows."
Conclusion: Excess female attrition from the academy is not just a loss of "intellectual capital" but a nexus for intense individual suffering for those being forced to relinquish a dream. Worth a read by all.
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Catching up on some reading this long weekend. First, @thenoclub. I thought, since I'm familiar with the authors' experiments on how women are more likely to be asked to do unrewarding tasks, and also agree to do them, that I knew what would be in the book, but I was wrong.
This is an insightful and inspiring book, with vivid examples across a wide range of professions, about how and why women in the workforce end up overburdened by the "non-promotable tasks" that are essential to businesses, other organizations and, of course, academia.
They also lay out in detail strategies for re-balancing your workload at an individual level, and for promoting organizational changes that allocate talent more effectively in your workplace. The book is written for a general audience and should be read by all working women.
"The data that crisis pregnancy centers are capable of collecting—names, locations, family details, sexual and medical histories, non-diagnostic ultrasound images—can now be deployed against those who seek their help." newyorker.com/magazine/2022/…
"Both abortion and miscarriage currently occur more than a million times each year in America, and the two events are often clinically indistinguishable. Because of this, prohibition states will have a profoundly invasive interest in differentiating between them."
"Physicians in prohibition states have already begun declining to treat women who are in the midst of miscarriages, for fear that the treatment could be classified as abortion."
A short thread about diversity in economics: Many departments and research units have been working on diversity and inclusion statements this year. Some statement drafts explicitly attribute econ's lack of diversity to discrimination, inequitable treatment, systematic bias, etc.
We were not so straightforward in the past, and this appears to have aroused indignation in many, who argue "you can't possibly know that's why econ is not diverse! Maybe it's preferences! Maybe it's productivity! You can't say it's discrimination!"
Yes, I can. In the case of gender, where there's enough data, there is now a substantial body of rigorous evidence that shows, in the case of academic publishing and tenure in particular, it's not a level playing-field out there.
Some thoughts after attending the terrific #WEBDiversitySummit organized by @caleconwomen. For me, one main takeaway was the informational disadvantage facing female, minority, and many international grad students.
It is hard for faculty to remember how little grad students know about the generally-unspoken rules of grad school and about how they can be successful as junior economists.
How and when do you choose an advisor? How many faculty members should you talk to regularly? What can you reasonably expect from them? What should you hide from them? How should you behave in seminars? How do you referee a paper? How do you respond to an R&R?