Posts Tagged women in academia

Weekly Feminist Reader

Zerlina talks with MHP about institutional betrayal.

Ariel Castro isn’t such an aberration.

And his testimony says much about us.

The Texas Legislature’s dirty little secret.

“Asian Girlz” sparks rightful criticism.

How to whitewash a plague.

To #twittersilence or not to #twittersilence, that is the question.

Cosmo so generously advises women how not to get raped. I thought Zerlina had already been over this?

The Crunk Feminist Collective has released another awesome mixtape.

PhD Mama.

Learning body positivity.

The “Weiner Women” aren’t saints, sluts, or victims.

The sexist language of the Weiner scandal.

Is sexism endemic to academic philosophy?

A ...

Zerlina talks with MHP about institutional betrayal.

Ariel Castro isn’t such an aberration.

And his testimony says much about us.

The Texas Legislature’s dirty little secret.

“Asian Girlz” sparks rightful criticism.

How ...

Quick Hit: Which academic disciplines have the most women authors?

Based on research from the University of Washington’s Eigenfactor Project, The Chronicle of Higher Education has put together a very cool interactive graphic displaying the gender distribution of academic authorship by discipline and era.

Women’s presence in higher education has increased, but as authors of scholarly papers—keys to career success—their publishing patterns differ from those of men. Explore nearly 1,800 fields and subfields, across four centuries, to see which areas have the most female authors and which have the fewest, in this exclusive Chronicle report. See how overall percentages differ from the important first-author position and—in two major bioscience fields—from the prestigious last-author position.

Unsurprisingly, women are underrepresented across the board, and their visibility varies significantly by field. The predictable ...

Based on research from the University of Washington’s Eigenfactor Project, The Chronicle of Higher Education has put together a very cool interactive graphic displaying the gender distribution of academic authorship by discipline and era.

Women’s presence in ...