Walters Cyrill, Mehl Graeme G, Piraino Patrizio, Jansen Jonathan D, Kriger Samantha
Stellenbosch University, Faculty of Education, Stellenbosch, 7600, South Africa.
University of Notre Dame, Keough School of Global Affairs, Indiana, 46556, USA.
Res Policy. 2022 Jan;51(1):104403. doi: 10.1016/j.respol.2021.104403. Epub 2021 Oct 25.
The underrepresentation of women in research is well-documented, in everything from participation and leadership to peer review and publication. Even so, in the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic, early reports indicated a precipitous decline in women's scholarly productivity (both in time devoted to research and in journal publications) compared to pre-pandemic times. None of these studies, mainly from the Global North, could provide detailed explanations for the scale of this decline in research outcomes. Using a mixed methods research design, we offer the first comprehensive study to shed light on the complex reasons for the decline in research during the pandemic-enforced lockdown among 2,029 women academics drawn from 26 public universities in South Africa. Our study finds that a dramatic increase in teaching and administrative workloads, and the traditional family roles assumed by women while "working from home," were among the key factors behind the reported decline in research activity among female academics in public universities. In short, teaching and administration effectively displaced research and publication-with serious implications for an already elusive gender equality in research. Finally, the paper offers recommendations that leaders and policy makers can draw on to support women academics and families in higher education during and beyond pandemic times.
女性在研究领域代表性不足的情况有充分记录,涵盖从参与度、领导力到同行评审和发表等各个方面。即便如此,在新冠疫情大流行的最初几个月,早期报告显示,与疫情前相比,女性的学术产出急剧下降(包括投入研究的时间和期刊发表数量)。这些主要来自北半球的研究均无法对研究成果下降的规模给出详细解释。我们采用混合方法研究设计,首次进行了全面研究,以揭示南非26所公立大学的2029名女学者在疫情强制封锁期间研究下降的复杂原因。我们的研究发现,教学和行政工作量的大幅增加,以及女性在“在家工作”时承担的传统家庭角色,是公立大学女学者研究活动下降的关键因素。简而言之,教学和行政工作实际上取代了研究和发表工作,这对本就难以实现的研究领域性别平等产生了严重影响。最后,本文提出了一些建议,可供领导者和政策制定者在疫情期间及之后支持高等教育领域的女学者和家庭时参考。