Women in the Natural Sciences
An increasing proportion of US scientists are women, but they continue to be underrepresented, underemployed, underpromoted, & underpaid relative to men. Participation rates, employment levels & earnings of women & men are compared for several science fields. These comparisons indicate t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 1976-01, Vol.1 (3), p.Spr-720 |
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creator | Vetter, Betty M |
description | An increasing proportion of US scientists are women, but they continue to be underrepresented, underemployed, underpromoted, & underpaid relative to men. Participation rates, employment levels & earnings of women & men are compared for several science fields. These comparisons indicate that despite the traditional social & cultural barriers & the shortage of role models which discourage participation of women in science, higher proportions of young women are entering these fields than in the previous 2 decades. However, a slowdown in growth of employment opportunities, affecting both women & men, has dampened the effects of affirmative action efforts & made equal opportunity for women more difficult to achieve. Discrimination in job opportunity, advancement, & salary continues to be evident, & is shown in a number of examples. AA. |
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issn | 0097-9740 |
language | eng |
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source | Sociological Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Alma/SFX Local Collection |
subjects | Nature/Natural/Naturalism/ Naturalistic Science/Sciences (see also Scientific) Status/Statuses United States/US Woman/Women (see also Female) |
title | Women in the Natural Sciences |
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