Gender and Work
Gender equity in college faculty pay - Um, not yet. [added 4/20/08]
"1943 guide to hiring women" - A blast from the past -- for example, "Give the female employee a definite day-long schedule of duties so that they’ll keep busy without bothering the management for instructions every few minutes. Numerous properties say that women make excellent workers when they have their jobs cut out for them, but that they lack initiative in finding work themselves." [added 4/20/08]
Women
and workplace stereotypes - interesting essay describing some
research on the "damned if you do, doomed if you don't"
situations women face in the workplace [added 1/8/08]
"Traditional
gender roles hold back female scientists" - [added
12/15/07]
"The
case for cyberfeminism" - Four dolls, two plastic and
two biological are seated around a small table inside a Starbucks
coffee shop at an upscale shopping center outside Dayton, Ohio. They
are all enjoying skim lattes. It is a Saturday. These same four dolls,
along with their husbands and dates were guests at a dinner party
the previous Thursday. Yes, it's an opinion essay that takes
the form of a one-act play. [added 12/15/07]
"Are
women asking for low wages?" - Research report entitled,
"Are women asking for low wages? Gender differences in wage bargaining
strategies and ensuing bargaining success" [added
8/05/07]
"Women
at work: A progress report" - a just-released report (2007)
from Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas [added 7/19/07]
Moms and jobs - "Moms
and jobs: Trends in mothers' employment and which mothers stay home"
is a fact sheet from the Council on Contemporary Families. [added
7/19/07]
In
which job sectors are men and women concentrated? - an interesting
recent survey of the European Union, finding that women are concentrated
in fewer job sectors than men -- see the graph on the first page that
captures it well [added 7/14/07]
Women
earn less than men - Here's the report from the American Association
of University Women that has recently made the news in the U.S. It
finds that "just one year out of college, women working full
time already earn less than their male colleagues, even when they
work in the same field. Ten years after graduation, the pay gap widens."
[added 7/14/07]
"Does
science promote women?" - "Many studies have shown that
women are under-represented in tenured ranks in the sciences. We evaluate
whether gender differences in the likelihood of obtaining a tenure
track job, promotion to tenure, and promotion to full professor explain
these facts using the 1973-2001 Survey of Doctorate Recipients. We
find that women are less likely to take tenure track positions in
science, but the gender gap is entirely explained by fertility decisions.
We find that in science overall, there is no gender difference in
promotion to tenure or full professor after controlling for demographic,
family, employer and productivity covariates and that in many cases,
there is no gender difference in promotion to tenure or full professor
even without controlling for covariates. However, family characteristics
have different impacts on women's and men's promotion probabilities.
Single women do better at each stage than single men, although this
might be due to selection. Children make it less likely that women
in science will advance up the academic job ladder beyond their early
post-doctorate years, while both marriage and children increase men's
likelihood of advancing." [added 7/7/07]
Working
Women Survey - 26,000 women respond to a 2006 online survey from
the AFL-CIO [added 12/30/06]
Bias
keeping women out of science - "Women are being filtered
out of high-level science, math, and engineering jobs in the United
States, and there is no good reason for it, according to a National
Academies report released yesterday." [added 12/30/06]
"No
job for a woman" - an exhibition and resources on "the
effects of war on women's lives during the 20th and 21st centuries"
-- from the Imperial War Museum [added 12/26/06]
"Visible invisibility:
Women of color in law firms" - report from the American Bar
Association Commission on Women in the Profession [added
12/26/06]
Barriers
to women's advancement in the workplace - From Catalyst, here is the
executive
summary of "Different cultures, similar perceptions: Stereotyping
of Western European business leaders," and the full
report. [added 7/6/06]
"Stewardess
Uniforms" - I know, this is bit of a weird site. Some guy
wants to share his fascination with the changing stewardess uniforms.
Some date back to the 1950s. [added 7/6/06]
Do
apparel "sweatshops" in third world countries help or hurt
women? - According to a report from the Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas, the apparel industry in third world countries encourages further
education for women. "In short, the maligned suppliers of Nike,
Gap and Wal-Mart encourage governments to educate women, give women
a reason to stay in school and pay them well by local standards. Our
study presents a picture of textile and footwear plants thats
far less harrowing than the sweatshop stereotype and more compatible
with surveys in dozens of countries that find female workers feel
they benefit from the factory jobs." [added 7/6/06]
What is mom's job worth? -
Study looked at what a stay-at-home mom's and a working mom's earnings
might look like if you compared their work as a mom to comparable
jobs like "laundry machine operator," "psychologist,"
and "CEO." [added 7/6/06]
Perceptions
of men and women as business leaders - "Women 'take care,'
men 'take charge': Stereotyping of U.S. business leaders exposed"
is a research report from Catalyst. "In this exploratory study,
Catalyst takes a detailed view of corporate leadership.We consider
ten essential behaviors required of corporate leaders. By looking
at leadership as a set of separate but related behaviors, we pinpoint
just where women leaders are vulnerable to stereotyping, and show
how the negative effects of stereotyping on any particular leader
behavior can spill over to other leader behaviors. This specificity
gives us a better foundation for recommending solutions." [added
1/10/06]
"Women
Working, 1800-1930" - a new collection from Harvard University
Library -- included are documents, images and teacher resources. [added
1/9/06]
Gender:
"101
facts on the status of workingwomen" - recent (2005) report
from Business and Professional Women [added 1/8/06]
"Getting
a job: Is there a motherhood penalty?"
- a press release about some interesting research - here is the research
article [added
1/7/06]
Most
desirable careers - The career most Americans encourage their
children to pursue is to "be a doctor" according to this
recent poll. Interestingly, "20 percent of Americans recommend
that young women become physicians, while 17 percent suggest medicine
as a career for young men." [added
9/20/05]
"Some
occupations becoming more gender-neutral" - brief report
published in the Occupational Outlook Quarterly [added
8/30/05]
"Inequities
persist for women and non-tenure-track faculty" - report
from the American Association of University Professors [added
8/30/05]
Do
women "opt out" of leadership and power at work? - article
entitled "Women pursuing leadership and power: Challenging the
myth of the 'opt out revolution'" from the Center for Gender
in Organzations [added 6/20/05]
College
degree contribution to gender wage gap - The study "Contribution
of degree subject to the gender wage gap among graduates: A comparison
of Britain, France and Germany" from the Anglo-German Foundation
for the Study of Industrial Society examines one of the possible factors
as to why women earn less than men. [added
3/1/05]
101
facts on the status of working women
- The Business and Professional Women's Foundation "has updated
its compilation of 101 Facts on the Status of Workingwomen."
[added 12/1/04]
"Latina
Women of NASA" - Not much here yet, but this new site includes
some biographies and links to other Hispanic/NASA connections. [added
7/23/03]
"Celebrating
Diversity: Women Energize an Atomic World" - From the International
Atomic Energy Agency, this site relays stories of women in the nuclear
field. [added 7/16/03]
Gender and the Military
Sexual
violence in the U.S. Armed Forces - "A considerable sacrifice:
The costs of sexual violence in the U.S. Armed Forces" is a paper
from The Miles Foundation. [added 1/9/06]
Women
in the Military
- text and audio from a conversation about women in combat - other
relevant links are also included - from National Public Radio
[added
7/23/03]
Women
in military service for America -
links to a variety of resources [added 3/6/02]
Tailhook
'91 - PBS Frontline show on the Navy Tailhook Convention where
"83 women and 7 men were assaulted during the three-day aviators'
convention, according to a report by the Inspector General of the
Department of Defense (DOD)."
Gender
Roles in Home/Marriage/Sex
"Men's changing contribution to housework and child care" - [added 4/20/08]
The paradox of polygamy - "Contrary to popular belief, most women benefit from polygynous society, and most men benefit from monogamous society. This is because polygynous society allows some women to share a resourceful man of high status." [added 4/13/08]
"Muslim American women confront domestic abuse" - [added 4/5/08]
"Korea's 'best mom' chosen
as face of new currency" - Interesting story -- "South
Korea's central bank on Monday chose the face of Korean motherhood
as the first woman to be featured on its banknotes, but women's rights
groups say the selection only reinforces sexist stereotypes."
[added 12/15/07]
Saudi
gang-rape victim punished - In Saudi Arabia, "the 19-year-old
victim was sentenced last year to 90 lashes for meeting with an unrelated
male, a former friend from whom she was retrieving photographs."
Then "the judges more than doubled the punishment for the victim
because of 'her attempt to aggravate and influence the judiciary through
the media.'" Here is
a story about the Muslim American Society condemning the Saudi court's
actions. Here
is a news video about the story and a response from the rape victim.
[added 12/15/07]
"The
truth of the mommy wars" - interesting and provocative essay
[added 12/9/07]
Realistic
female dolls for men - "Thousands of men are shelling out
$6,500 for hyper-realistic dolls that answer all their needs -- and
don't talk back." No mention in the article of women buying men
dolls. What would a male doll that answered all of women's needs be
like? [added 12/9/07]
Widows
in India flock to city to die - Sad story of how, "ostracized
by society, thousands of India's widows flock to the holy city of
Vrindavan waiting to die." [added 10/27/07]
Polygamy follows Africans to New
York City - article in The New York Times [added
7/19/07]
Moms
and jobs - "Moms and jobs: Trends in mothers' employment
and which mothers stay home" is a fact sheet from the Council
on Contemporary Families. [added 7/19/07]
More
on honor killings - a story of a young Turkish woman living in
Germany who claims to be escaping an abusive husband and the fear
of an "honor killing" [added 7/14/07]
Mail-order
brides - This interestingly entitled article, "Romance is
dead: The consumer husband marries a surrogate corpse and the mail-order
bride industry invites feminism to the wedding," suggests that
"intimacy is a topic in need of analysis by legal scholars. The
mail-order bride industry provides a useful starting point, most poignantly
through the experience of the consumer-husband and his purchased bride.
Males who purchase their sexual gratification embody a masculinity
reflective of the desire for female subordination and passivity. But
this context reveals deeper concerns about the intersection of masculinity
and sexuality at large." [added 7/7/07]
Feet
binding in China - Two elderly women share their very interesting
stories of feet binding and other aspects of life years ago in China.
[added 12/30/06]
The
practice of sati - This article describes the practice
of sati (self-immolation) in which a Hindu widow throws herself on
the funeral pyre of her husband to remain pure and demonstrate "everlasting
devotion to her husband." The article describes the evolution
of the practice and the use of the term. This page is from the Women
in World History project from The Center for History and New Media
at George Mason University. You can also visit the homepage
of the Women in World History site which contains a lot of good educational
resources. [added 12/30/06]
Honor
killings in Iraq - An article describing crimes against women
in Iraq in the name of family honor -- also an audio
story on the topic from National Public Radio. [added
12/30/06]
What
is mom's job worth? - Study looked at what a stay-at-home mom's
and a working mom's earnings might look like if you compared their
work as a mom to comparable jobs like "laundry machine operator,"
"psychologist," and "CEO." [added
7/6/06]
Domestic
violence against women - report from the World Health Organization
[added 1/13/06]
Home
economics resources - Huge (about 400,000 pages) repository of
books and journals available online from 1850-1950 on home economics
and related disciplines from Cornell University libraries -- provides
a fascinating picture of past norms and roles. For example, I did
a search for "good wife" and found a 1950 text that described
what a good husband and a good wife should be like. [added
8/30/05]
Marital
history - How many Whites (or Hispanics or Asians) were married
between the ages of 15-19 according to the 2000 census? How many were
married by the time they were 60 years of age? Pour through some U.S.
Census Bureau on marital history. It's fun, try it! [added
6/17/05]
Child
marriage
Story
1; Story
2; Story
3
A sad yet utterly fascinating story is told in this Chicago Tribune
series (2004) of young girls being forced to marry as early as seven
years of age. The first link tells of such practices in Ethiopia.
The second link is to the second and more hopeful installment of this
story, covering efforts in Egypt to reverse the devastating effects
of this practice. The third link is to a story covering early marriage
in the U.S. [added
3/1/05]
Changing
norms regarding breastfeeding in public - report summarizing the
current status of breastfeeding laws in all 50 states of the U.S.
[added 12/1/04]
The
Pill - very informative website accompanying the PBS American
Experience episode on the history and influence of the contraceptive
pill - includes some video clips and tracking of attitudes over time.
[added
6/9/04]
Mothers
giving up daughters - The following excerpt comes from a fascinating
article in the latest issue of Science News entitled, Mother
and child disunion: Don't take a mother's love for granted. "Shortly
after arriving in Taiwan in 1957, Stanford University anthropologist
Arthur Wolf reached the rural village of Hsia-ch'i-chou. There, he
met a weathered-looking woman who told an incredible story. Several
decades previously, she had given away her five infant daughters and
had replaced them with five girls adopted from other families and
fated to become wives to her five sons. The friendly, outgoing woman
seemed proud of what she'd done, Wolf recalls, adding that she described
the dispatching of her babies to new homes as smart household management.
"I gave away all five girls and raised instead wives for my five
sons," Wolf remembers her saying. "This saved me [money
and ultimately the need to pay dowries] as well as the trouble of
arranging 10 marriages." For each marriage of an adult son, for
example, she would have had to throw large and expensive feasts, as
well as pay a fee to the bride's family." [added
4/06/04]
Female
Genital Mutilation (FGM): Amnesty
International / NOCIRC -
The first link from Amnesty International provides a lot of background
info on FGM as well as why the organization has taken up this issue.
The second link is to NOCIRC, an "educational non-profit organization
committed to securing the birthright of male, female, and intersex
children and babies to keep their sex organs intact." [added
3/30/04]
"Levittown:
Documents of an Ideal American Suburb" -
a study of the changing and developing American suburb through one
of its most famous case studies - told primarily through images as
this site is from the Art History Department of the University of
Illinois at Chicago [added 12/03/02]
Gender
and sexuality - links [added 9/10/02]
"How
to be a Good Wife" - purportedly from a home economics high
school textbook, 1954 (can anyone verify this?)
"Making
'Welfare to Work' Really Work"
- position paper from the Division of the Psychology of Women of APA
Gender
in Education and Athletics
Single-sex
schools
- a brief article by Elaine Cassel [added 3/23/04]
Title
IX report (2003) - "'Open to All': Title IX at Thirty"
is a report from the Secretary of Educations Commission on Opportunity
in Athletics. [added 7/23/03]
"Title
IX at 30: Report Card on Gender Equity"
- (June, 2002) - "Title IX at 30: Report Card on Gender Equity
is a follow-up to the 1997 NCWGE publication, Title IX at 25: Report
Card on Gender Equity. This new report reasseses the law five years
later and examines the state of gender equity in education in ten
key areas: access to higher education, athletics, career education,
employment, learning environment, math and science, sexual harassment,
standardized testing, technology, and treatment of pregnant and parenting
students." [added 8/14/02]
Gender
Roles and the Media
India's
first transgender TV host - "Her forthcoming show, called
'Yours, Rose,' will be a venue to debate all kinds of socially taboo
topics." [added 1/8/08]
Do
girls prefer pink? - a good description of how the media often
overblows research findings [added 11/18/07]
Advertising
soap in America - The Ivory Project, from the National Museum
of American History, contains hundreds of interesting print soap ads
from 1838-1998, primarily for Ivory soap but also including other
brands. Interesting to track the portrayal of women in particular
through these ads. [added
7/1/04]
Picturing
Women - "Picturing Women explores how women are figured,
fashioned, turned into portraits, and told about in words and pictorial
narrative." [added 6/9/04]
Lesson
plans - high school plans on gender portrayal [added
9/10/02]
Gender
in the media - links to lots of articles on gender roles and gender
portrayal in the media - from the U. of Iowa Dept. of Communication
Studies [added 9/10/02]
"The
Merchants of Cool"
- PBS website accompanying its Frontline program first aired in 2001.
It is a "report on the creators and marketers of popular culture
for teenagers." Now view the entire program online! [added
8/30/02]
About-Face.org
- "a San Francisco-based group, About-Face combats negative and
distorted images of women" - site contains hundreds of images
of women, negatively and positively portrayed, with commentary. Also
a few research articles and "lots o' links" to body image
and other topics [added 3/21/02]
Gender
Roles and ...
"Is
there anything good about men?" - interesting APA address
(2007) from Roy Baumeister on how culture tends to exploit men in
certain ways [added 11/18/07]
"The
double dividend of gender equality" - From UNICEF, "The
State of the World's Children 2007 examines the discrimination and
disempowerment women face throughout their lives - and outlines what
must be done to eliminate gender discrimination and empower women
and girls. It looks at the status of women today, discusses how gender
equality will move all the Millennium Development Goals forward, and
shows how investment in women's rights will ultimately produce a double
dividend: advancing the rights of both women and children." [added
12/30/06]
The
Gender Genie! - Interesting site in which you paste some text
you (or anyone) have (has) written. The Genie will tell you whether
you are male or female! It uses a simple algorithm to reach its conclusion.
Try it out. Here
is an explanation of the program and its success rate. [added
12/30/06]
Is
Title IX working? - "In recognition of the 35th anniversary
of Title IX, the landmark law that mandates equal educational opportunities
for male and female students, the National Womens Law Center
today is releasing the outcome of an investigation of Title IX complaints
as well as the results of a national poll that shows overwhelming
public support for Title IX." [added 8/05/07]
"'Women's
town' puts men in their place" - Fascinating story of an
area of China: "Traditional women dominate and men have to be
obedient in the areas of Sichuan province and Chongqing, and now we
are using it as an idea to attract tourists and boost tourism,"
the official, surname Li, said by telephone." Now they are building
a tourist site -- Women's Town -- to allow tourists to experience
this turning of gender roles on its head. Sounds like an article from
The Onion to me. [added 7/14/07]
"Women
lose ground in the new Iraq" - [added 12/30/06]
Wendy
Macpherson "outbowled everybody in the country" - This
may be the first case of a woman winning a major sporting event in
the U.S. (in the world?) over all participants, including men. Know
of other such cases? [added 12/26/06]
"Spread
of Islamic law in Indonesia takes toll on women" - article
from the New York Times [added 7/6/06]
Girls
names - Here is an interesting column about the popularity of
girls names in the U.S., with particular attention to the name "Madison."
It is apparently one of several boys names that became popular as
a girl's name over time. "The list of former boys names since
appropriated by girls now includes Vivian, Joyce, Beverley, Leslie,
Lindsey and Ashley." An expert in names noted in the column that
one reason parents have chosen "male" names for their girls
is to "give the daughter a strong image." Interestingly,
the expert "could think of no examples in the U.S. of traditional
girls names that common usage transformed into boys names. It's a
sign, he said, of the deep-rooted sexism in our society that 'parents
think a girls' name would contaminate a boy and make him weak.'"
[added 7/6/06]
"How
to get more Pakistani girls into school" - report from The
World Bank [added 7/6/06]
"Jewish
women and the feminist revolution" - resources from the Jewish
Women's Archive [added 1/10/06]
"Promoting
gender equality in transport" - This paper from the Equal
Opportunities Commission in the UK investigates travel patterns of
men and women and "unintended gender-bias in UK transport policy."
[added 1/9/06]
Girls
and gaming - "Dr. Denise Agosto examines computer game use
among girls and suggests how teacher-librarians can encourage girls
to become equal players in the male-dominated world of gaming."
[added 6/20/05]
"Japan
debates female succession" - article from BBC News (2005)
[added 6/17/05]
Masculinity
- links to various related resources - from the Gender and Diversities
Institute [added 8/14/02]