A multidisciplinary study of gender-based research productivity in the world's best journals

The past academic gender literature has focused on the underproduction of academic women in research outcomes and related reasons such as prejudice, more frequent career breaks and personality differences between genders. This study examines the top six journals in the world and finds no difference...

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Main Authors: Tower, Greg, Plummer, J., Ridgewell, Brenda
Format: Journal Article
Published: The Clute Institute for Academic Research 2007
Online Access:http://journals.cluteonline.com/index.php/JDM/article/view/5020/5111
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33275
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author Tower, Greg
Plummer, J.
Ridgewell, Brenda
author_facet Tower, Greg
Plummer, J.
Ridgewell, Brenda
author_sort Tower, Greg
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The past academic gender literature has focused on the underproduction of academic women in research outcomes and related reasons such as prejudice, more frequent career breaks and personality differences between genders. This study examines the top six journals in the world and finds no difference between women and men productivity when the percentage of women participating in the academic work force is factored in. Women have a 30-35% participation rate in academic university positions and represented almost 30% of the authors in the top tiered journals. There are also no significantly statistical differences in Journal Impact Factor ratings between men and women. These findings are consistent across all the major disciplines, science, business and social science. Other trends are noted such as the significantly higher number of authors in science journals and the different trends between US and non-US authors. Science authors’ quality (as measured by Journal Impact Factor (JIF of 31.9) is significantly higher than non-science authors (JIF 6.5); thus differences in quality are discipline specific not a gender issue. The implications are that academic women’s research contribution matches that of a man’s productivity.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-332752017-03-08T13:13:31Z A multidisciplinary study of gender-based research productivity in the world's best journals Tower, Greg Plummer, J. Ridgewell, Brenda The past academic gender literature has focused on the underproduction of academic women in research outcomes and related reasons such as prejudice, more frequent career breaks and personality differences between genders. This study examines the top six journals in the world and finds no difference between women and men productivity when the percentage of women participating in the academic work force is factored in. Women have a 30-35% participation rate in academic university positions and represented almost 30% of the authors in the top tiered journals. There are also no significantly statistical differences in Journal Impact Factor ratings between men and women. These findings are consistent across all the major disciplines, science, business and social science. Other trends are noted such as the significantly higher number of authors in science journals and the different trends between US and non-US authors. Science authors’ quality (as measured by Journal Impact Factor (JIF of 31.9) is significantly higher than non-science authors (JIF 6.5); thus differences in quality are discipline specific not a gender issue. The implications are that academic women’s research contribution matches that of a man’s productivity. 2007 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33275 http://journals.cluteonline.com/index.php/JDM/article/view/5020/5111 The Clute Institute for Academic Research restricted
spellingShingle Tower, Greg
Plummer, J.
Ridgewell, Brenda
A multidisciplinary study of gender-based research productivity in the world's best journals
title A multidisciplinary study of gender-based research productivity in the world's best journals
title_full A multidisciplinary study of gender-based research productivity in the world's best journals
title_fullStr A multidisciplinary study of gender-based research productivity in the world's best journals
title_full_unstemmed A multidisciplinary study of gender-based research productivity in the world's best journals
title_short A multidisciplinary study of gender-based research productivity in the world's best journals
title_sort multidisciplinary study of gender-based research productivity in the world's best journals
url http://journals.cluteonline.com/index.php/JDM/article/view/5020/5111
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33275