Long-term patterns of gender imbalance in an industry without ability or level of interest differences

Female representation has been slowly but steadily increasing in many sectors of society. One sector where one would expect to see gender parity is the movie industry, yet the representation of females in most functions within the U.S. movie industry remain surprisingly low. Here, we study the histo...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2020-04, Vol.15 (4), p.e0229662-e0229662
Hauptverfasser: Amaral, Luís A Nunes, Moreira, João A G, Dunand, Murielle L, Tejedor Navarro, Heliodoro, Lee, Hyojun Ada
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creator Amaral, Luís A Nunes
Moreira, João A G
Dunand, Murielle L
Tejedor Navarro, Heliodoro
Lee, Hyojun Ada
description Female representation has been slowly but steadily increasing in many sectors of society. One sector where one would expect to see gender parity is the movie industry, yet the representation of females in most functions within the U.S. movie industry remain surprisingly low. Here, we study the historical patterns of female representation among actors, directors, and producers in an attempt to gain insights into the possible causes of the lack of gender parity in the industry. Our analyses reveals a remarkable temporal coincidence between the collapse in female representation across all functions and the advent of the Studio System, a period when the major Hollywood studios controlled all aspects of the industry. Female representation among actors, directors, producers and writers dropped to extraordinarily low values during the emergence and consolidation of the Studio System that in some cases have not yet recovered to pre-Studio System levels. In order to explore some possible mechanisms behind these patterns, we investigate the association between the gender balance of actors, writers, directors, and producers and a number of economic indicators, movie industry indicators, and movie characteristics. We find robust, strong, and significant associations which are consistent with an important role for the gender of decision makers on the gender balance of other industry functions. While in no way demonstrating causality, our findings add new perspectives to the discussions of the reasons for female under-representation in fields such as computer science and medicine, that have also experienced dramatic changes in female representation.
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subjects Actors
Beef cattle
Bioengineering
Biology and Life Sciences
Casting (Performing arts)
Computer and Information Sciences
Computer science
Decision making
Demographic aspects
Economic conditions
Females
Forecasts and trends
Gender
Gender differences
Gender equality
History
Indicators
Males
Maternity & paternity leaves
Mathematicians
Motion pictures
Movie industry
People and Places
Physical Sciences
Representations
Research and Analysis Methods
Sex discrimination against women
Social Sciences
Software industry
STEM education
Trends
World War II
title Long-term patterns of gender imbalance in an industry without ability or level of interest differences
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