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  4. A gender equality paradox in academic publishing: Countries with a higher proportion of female first-authored journal articles have larger first-author gender disparities between fields
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A gender equality paradox in academic publishing: Countries with a higher proportion of female first-authored journal articles have larger first-author gender disparities between fields

Publication type
journal article
Publication date
2020
Author(s)
Thelwall, M.
Mas-Bleda, A.
Source
Scopus
Language
English
Keywords

Academic publishing

Field differences

Gender

International differe...

View point(s)
Global
Discipline(s)

Engineering

Health Sciences

Mathematics

Physics

STEM

Geographical area

USA

Abstract
Current attempts to address the shortfall of female researchers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) have not yet succeeded, despite other academic subjects having female majorities. This article investigates the extent to which gender disparities are subject-wide or nation-specific by a first-author gender comparison of 30 million articles from all 27 Scopus broad fields within the 31 countries with the most Scopus-indexed articles 2014–2018. The results show overall and geocultural patterns as well as individual national differences. Almost half of the subjects were always more male (seven; e.g., Mathematics) or always more female (six; e.g., Immunology & Microbiology) than the national average. A strong overall trend (Spearman correlation 0.546) is for countries with a higher proportion of female first-authored research to also have larger differences in gender disparities between fields (correlation 0.314 for gender ratios). This confirms the international gender equality paradox previously found for degree subject choices: Increased gender equality overall associates with moderately greater gender differentiation between subjects. This is consistent with previous United States-based claims that gender differences in academic careers are partly due to (socially constrained) gender differences in personal preferences. Radical solutions may therefore be needed for some STEM subjects to overcome gender disparities. © 2020 Mike Thelwall and Amalia Mas-Bleda. Published under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license.
Journal
Quantitative Science Studies
ISSN
2641-3337
DOI
10.1162/qss_a_00050
Volume
1
Issue
3
Pagination
1260-1282
https://libkey.io/libraries/2561/articles/502188576/full-text-file?utm_source=api_2667&allow_speedbump=true
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