Higher research productivity = more pay? Gender pay-for-productivity inequity across disciplines

Gender pay equity for academics continues to be elusive. Adding to scholarship around structural barriers to gender equity in academic settings, we investigate the link between scholarly performance and compensation. We expect high research productivity to be differentially associated with compensat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientometrics 2023-02, Vol.128 (2), p.1395-1407
Hauptverfasser: Samaniego, Charissa, Lindner, Peggy, Kazmi, Maryam A., Dirr, Bobbie A., Kong, Dejun Tony, Jeff-Eke, Evonzia, Spitzmueller, Christiane
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container_start_page 1395
container_title Scientometrics
container_volume 128
creator Samaniego, Charissa
Lindner, Peggy
Kazmi, Maryam A.
Dirr, Bobbie A.
Kong, Dejun Tony
Jeff-Eke, Evonzia
Spitzmueller, Christiane
description Gender pay equity for academics continues to be elusive. Adding to scholarship around structural barriers to gender equity in academic settings, we investigate the link between scholarly performance and compensation. We expect high research productivity to be differentially associated with compensation outcomes for men and women. Building on social role theory, we hypothesize that these relationships are contingent upon whether researchers are inside or outside of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM). Using the h-index, compensation, and researcher demographics for 3033 STEM and social and behavioral sciences (SBS) researchers from 17 R1 universities, we applied multilevel modeling techniques and showed that cumulative research productivity was more strongly related to compensation for men versus women researchers. However, these effects only held in STEM disciplines but not in SBS disciplines. Based on these results, we recommend that institutions consider changing how pay analyses are conducted and advocate for adding explicit modeling of scientific performance-compensation links as part of routine pay equity analyses.
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source Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Academic careers
Author productivity
Compensation
Computer Science
Gender
Gender equity
Information Storage and Retrieval
Library Science
Men
Modelling
Productivity
title Higher research productivity = more pay? Gender pay-for-productivity inequity across disciplines
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