News, Views and Careers for All of Higher Education
Dec. 7, 2005
The presidents of nine leading research universities on Tuesday released a joint statement pledging continued work to promote the advancement of women in academic positions. The statement said that “barriers still exist” that prevent progress for female academics, and pledged to change institutional policies, provide resources and to “promote a culture that supports family commitments” as part of the drive to help women.
Among those signing the statement was Lawrence H. Summers of Harvard University, who started off the year defending comments — for which he has since apologized — saying that bias was no longer as much of a problem for women in science. Other presidents who signed the statement were the leaders of the California and Massachusetts Institutes of Technology; Princeton, Stanford and Yale Universities; and the Universities of California at Berkeley, Michigan and Pennsylvania.
The statement was released by Berkeley, which held a meeting in the summer to follow up on a meeting of the presidents of these nine institutions in 2001, in response to an earlier MIT report that faulted a variety of institutional policies in limiting the advancement of women. At the meeting this year, representatives of each of the universities gathered to share ideas on how to continue to help women in academe. The joint statement was released to encourage and draw attention to those efforts.
Because the discussion has its roots in an MIT report, and the comments by Summers created such an uproar this year, much of the public debate has concerned female faculty members in the sciences. But the joint statement said that the concerns extended beyond science, to women in “academic fields throughout higher education.”
There were few details in the joint statement, beyond a mutual pledge to work on these issues. “While considerable progress has been made since 2001, we acknowledge that there are still significant steps to be taken toward making academic careers compatible with family caregiving responsibilities,” the presidents said.
“The future excellence of our institutions depends on our ability to provide equitable and productive career paths for all faculty,” they concluded.
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The best way for the 9 President’s toachieve Gender Equity is by setting an example for the rest of American higher education.
The male president’s of Caltech, Harvard,Stanford, Berkeley and Yale should resign and recommend that each of their replacements be female leaders.
Dewey Stanford, at 9:08 am EST on December 7, 2005
Kudos to Princeton for recently making parental leave to either parent automatic. Although I am childless, I hope that such policies will be adopted elsewhere.
Transparency would also help equity. If Berkeley really wants to establish equity, they could freely publish all salaries, just as most public universities do! BUt tehy know too well the potential costs involved...
Dana Buntrock, at 11:29 am EST on December 7, 2005
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Your brief mention that this statement is devoid of details is the real news here. I fail to see the point of releasing this statement, other than for a little PR value which you have provided. I’d like to see IHE follow up with these institutions to identify concrete steps they have taken to address the barriers women face. The real story is in the changes that have (or have not) been made.
Amy, Public Relations & Development Consultant, at 8:37 am EST on December 7, 2005