Inside Academia, Subtler Sexism

Women cite 'deeply entrenched inequities' on tough path at research universities
By Nick McMaster,  Newser Staff
Posted Jun 15, 2008 2:17 PM CDT
Inside Academia, Subtler Sexism
Huntington university's campus.   ((c) laffy4k)

Gender discrimination at research universities is surely much better than it was in decades past, but a study based on interviews of female faculty finds that sexism remains on campus, Inside Higher Ed reports. While overt shows of bias are rare, a host of subtler, “deeply entrenched inequities” have replaced them. Noted by the report are:

  • Devalued positions: When women serve as deans and chairs, the positions are viewed as “more service-oriented and less substantive.”
  • Unintended bias: Female faculty describe a steady stream of comments, some ostensibly supportive, that show a lack of professional respect from male colleagues.
  • Irrelevant help: Services for gender issues focus on legal liability and technical issues, making them irrelevant to less defined concerns.
(More academia stories.)

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