A Rare Case of Gender Parity in Academia

被引:31
作者
Lynn, Freda B. [1 ]
Noonan, Mary C. [1 ]
Sauder, Michael [1 ]
Andersson, Matthew A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Iowa, Sociol, Iowa City, IA 52242 USA
[2] Baylor Univ, Sociol, Waco, TX 76798 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
DOUBLE STANDARDS; CITATION COUNTS; IMPACT; PRODUCTIVITY; SCIENCE; WOMEN; BIAS; PUBLICATION; SCIENTISTS; INEQUALITY;
D O I
10.1093/sf/soy126
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
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.
引用
收藏
页码:518 / 547
页数:30
相关论文
共 100 条
[91]   Medical innovation revisited:: Social contagion versus marketing effort [J].
Van den Bulte, C ;
Lilien, GL .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SOCIOLOGY, 2001, 106 (05) :1409-1435
[92]   Publication metrics and success on the academic job market [J].
van Dijk, David ;
Manor, Ohad ;
Carey, Lucas B. .
CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2014, 24 (11) :R516-R517
[93]   Degrees of Difference: Gender Segregation of U.S. Doctorates by Field and Program Prestige [J].
Weeden, Kim A. ;
Thebaud, Sarah ;
Gelbgiser, Dafna .
SOCIOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2017, 4 :123-150
[94]   Nepotism and sexism in peer-review [J].
Wenneras, C ;
Wold, A .
NATURE, 1997, 387 (6631) :341-343
[95]   The Role of Gender in Scholarly Authorship [J].
West, Jevin D. ;
Jacquet, Jennifer ;
King, Molly M. ;
Correll, Shelley J. ;
Bergstrom, Carl T. .
PLOS ONE, 2013, 8 (07)
[96]  
Williams J., 2000, UNBENDING GENDER WHY
[97]   GENDER INEQUALITY AND TIME ALLOCATIONS AMONG ACADEMIC FACULTY [J].
Winslow, Sarah .
GENDER & SOCIETY, 2010, 24 (06) :769-793
[98]   The increasing dominance of teams in production of knowledge [J].
Wuchty, Stefan ;
Jones, Benjamin F. ;
Uzzi, Brian .
SCIENCE, 2007, 316 (5827) :1036-1039
[99]  
Xie Y., 2003, Women in science: Career processes and outcomes
[100]   "Undemocracy": inequalities in science [J].
Xie, Yu .
SCIENCE, 2014, 344 (6186) :809-810