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Explaining Gender Differences in Academics' Career Trajectories (2009.10830v1)

Published 22 Sep 2020 in cs.SI

Abstract: Academic fields exhibit substantial levels of gender segregation. To date, most attempts to explain this persistent global phenomenon have relied on limited cross-sections of data from specific countries, fields, or career stages. Here we used a global longitudinal dataset assembled from profiles on ORCID.org to investigate which characteristics of a field predict gender differences among the academics who leave and join that field. Only two field characteristics consistently predicted such differences: (1) the extent to which a field values raw intellectual talent ("brilliance") and (2) whether a field is in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM). Women more than men moved away from brilliance-oriented and STEM fields, and men more than women moved toward these fields. Our findings suggest that stereotypes associating brilliance and other STEM-relevant traits with men more than women play a key role in maintaining gender segregation across academia.

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Authors (4)
  1. Aniko Hannak (14 papers)
  2. Kenneth Joseph (28 papers)
  3. Andrei Cimpian (1 paper)
  4. Daniel B. Larremore (28 papers)
Citations (2)

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