Information School, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, United States.
College of Education, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, United States.
Elife. 2022 Jul 13;11:e78909. doi: 10.7554/eLife.78909.
Being a parent has long been associated with gender disparities in academia. However, details of the mechanisms by which parenthood and gender influence academic career achievement and progression are not fully understood. Here, using data from a survey of 7,764 academics in North America and publication data from the Web of Science, we analyze gender differences in parenthood and academic achievements and explore the influence of work-family conflict and partner support on these gender gaps. Our results suggest that gender gaps in academic achievement are, in fact, "parenthood gender gaps." Specifically, we found significant gender gaps in most of the measures of academic achievement (both objective and subjective) in the parent group but not in the non-parent group. Mothers are more likely than fathers to experience higher levels of work-family conflict and to receive lower levels of partner support, contributing significantly to the gender gaps in academic achievement for the parent group. We also discuss possible interventions and actions for reducing gender gaps in academia.
长期以来,为人父母一直与学术界的性别差异有关。然而,为人父母和性别如何影响学术职业成就和发展的机制细节尚不完全清楚。在这里,我们使用了一项针对北美 7764 名学者的调查数据和 Web of Science 的出版物数据,分析了为人父母和学术成就方面的性别差异,并探讨了工作-家庭冲突和伴侣支持对这些性别差距的影响。我们的研究结果表明,学术成就方面的性别差距实际上是“为人父母方面的性别差距”。具体来说,我们发现,在有子女的群体中,大多数学术成就(客观和主观)的衡量标准都存在显著的性别差距,但在没有子女的群体中则没有。母亲比父亲更有可能经历更高水平的工作-家庭冲突,获得更低水平的伴侣支持,这对有子女群体的学术成就性别差距有重大影响。我们还讨论了减少学术界性别差距的可能干预措施和行动。