Academic Women at the University of Zimbabwe: Career Prospects, Aspirations and Family Role Constraints.
Abstract
At independence in 1980 the University of Zimbabwe faced two
major problems with regard to the composition of academic staff:
a racial imbalance and a gender imbalance. A strong staff development
programme was initiated which by 1987 had considerably
improved the racial balance. The gender imbalance, however
remained a problem. Women represent 21% of the academic staff,
an increase of only 4% over the past ten years. They continue
to be concentrated in the middle and lower academic ranks in
all faculties and even with doctoral degrees are less likely than
men to be promoted to the higher academic ranks of senior lecturer,
associate professor and professor. Their participation in
University governance is low with important decision making committees
composed largely of male academics.
Consequently, the Ford Foundation gave a grant to the Human
Resources Research Centre for a study to be undertaken which
would investigate the problem of the under-representation and
status of academic women at the University of Zimbabwe. This
paper is based on one aspect of the project which was a survey
of current members of the academic staff conducted in July-
August 1988 using a mailed questionnaire.
The purpose of the survey was to investigate factors affecting
academic career prospects for women. The questionnaire included
items which would elicit data on gender differences with regard
to academic rank, academic qualifications, productivity, involvement
in University governance, attitudes towards an academic
career, attitudes towards women in academic careers, and the extent
to which home and family responsibilities affect academic
careers. The questionnaire was pre-tested on a small pilot sample
in June and revised.
Full Text Links
Dorsey, B.J (1989) Academic Women at the University of Zimbabwe: Career prospects, Aspirations and Family Role Constraints.Harare, Mt. Pleasant: HRRC.1013-3445
http://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/123456789/4606
Publisher
Zimbabwe Human Research Centre (HRRC); University of Zimbabwe.
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/University of Zimbabwe