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  4. Quantitative datasets reveal marked gender disparities in Earth Sciences faculty rank in Africa
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Quantitative datasets reveal marked gender disparities in Earth Sciences faculty rank in Africa

Publication type
journal article
Publication date
2023
Author(s)
Mosuro, G.O.
Omosanya, K.O.
Lawal, M.A.
Oussou, A.
Oshomoji, A.O.
more
Language
English
Keywords

Africa

Academic Performance

Gender Disparity

Quantitative Analysis...

Student

Datasets

Gender Roles

View point(s)
University Rankings
Discipline(s)

Geosciences

Geographical area

Africa

Abstract
As in most disciplines of science, technology, engineering, mathematics and medicine (STEMM), gender disparity is prevalent in the ranking of Earth Sciences faculties at senior and advanced levels. (i.e., Associate and Full Professors). In this study, a robust database was mined, created, and analyzed to assess the faculty compositions of 142 Earth Science departments in 39 countries across Africa. The data were collected from verifiable online resources focusing on ranks and gender ratios within each department. The studied earth science departments cut across universities in northern, southern, central, eastern, and western Africa. Our data revealed that female faculty members are predominantly underrepresented in most of the departments documented and are markedly uncommon in senior positions such as Professors, associate Professors, and senior researchers compared to their male counterparts. On the contrary, female faculty members are predominant in the lower cadres, such as lecturers, teaching, and graduate assistants. The observed male to female ratio is 4:1. At the base of this gender gap is the lower enrolment of female students in Earth Science courses from undergraudate to graduate studies. To achieve gender equality in Earth Science faculty composition in Africa, we recommend increasing female students' enrollment, mentoring, awareness, timely promotion of accomplished female researchers, and formulation of enabling government policies. More work-related policies that guarantee work-life balance for female earth science academic professionals should be formulated to attract and retain more women into Earth Sciences careers. © 2022 Elsevier Ltd
Journal
Journal of African Earth Sciences
ISSN
1464-343X
DOI
10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2022.104768
Volume
197
Pagination
104768
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85141533621&doi=10.1016%2fj.jafrearsci.2022.104768&partnerID=40&md5=fe1d9483fb7ab54c1552423a68fa114c
https://libkey.io/libraries/2561/articles/537521998/full-text-file?utm_source=api_2667&allow_speedbump=true
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