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Scientific and engineering research is increasingly global, and
international collaboration can be essential to academic success.
Yet even as administrators and policymakers extol the benefits of
global science, few recognize the diversity of international
research collaborations and their participants, or take gendered
inequalities into account. Women in Global Science is the first
book to consider systematically the challenges and opportunities
that the globalization of scientific work brings to U.S. academics,
especially for women faculty. Kathrin Zippel looks to the STEM
fields as a case study, where gendered cultures and structures in
academia have contributed to an underrepresentation of women. While
some have approached underrepresentation as a national concern with
a national solution, Zippel highlights how gender relations are
reconfigured in global academia. For U.S. women in particular,
international collaboration offers opportunities to step outside of
exclusionary networks at home. International collaboration is not
the panacea to gendered inequalities in academia, but, as Zippel
argues, international considerations can be key to ending the
steady attrition of women in STEM fields and developing a more
inclusive academic world.
Scientific and engineering research is increasingly global, and
international collaboration can be essential to academic success.
Yet even as administrators and policymakers extol the benefits of
global science, few recognize the diversity of international
research collaborations and their participants, or take gendered
inequalities into account. Women in Global Science is the first
book to consider systematically the challenges and opportunities
that the globalization of scientific work brings to U.S. academics,
especially for women faculty. Kathrin Zippel looks to the STEM
fields as a case study, where gendered cultures and structures in
academia have contributed to an underrepresentation of women. While
some have approached underrepresentation as a national concern with
a national solution, Zippel highlights how gender relations are
reconfigured in global academia. For U.S. women in particular,
international collaboration offers opportunities to step outside of
exclusionary networks at home. International collaboration is not
the panacea to gendered inequalities in academia, but, as Zippel
argues, international considerations can be key to ending the
steady attrition of women in STEM fields and developing a more
inclusive academic world.
In the labor market and workplace, anti-discrimination rules,
affirmative action policies, and pay equity procedures exercise a
direct effect on gender relations. But what can be done to
influence the ways that men and women allocate tasks and
responsibilities at home? In Gender Equality, Volume VI in the Real
Utopias series, social scientists Janet C. Gornick and Marcia K.
Meyers propose a set of policies--paid family leave provisions,
working time regulations, and early childhood education and
care--designed to foster more egalitarian family divisions of labor
by strengthening men's ties at home and women's attachment to paid
work. Their policy proposal is followed by a series of
commentaries--both critical and supportive--from a group of
distinguished scholars, and a concluding essay in which Gornick and
Meyers respond to a debate that is a timely and valuable
contribution to egalitarian politics.
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