Trends in the representation of women among US geoscience faculty from
1999-2020: the long road towards gender parity
Abstract
Inequalities persist in the geosciences. White women and people of color
remain under-represented at all levels of academic faculty, including
positions of power such as departmental and institutional leadership.
While the proportion of women among geoscience faculty has been
catalogued previously, new programs and initiatives aimed at improving
diversity, focused on institutional factors that affect equity in the
geosciences, necessitate an updated study and a new metric for
quantifying the biases that result in under-representation . We compile
a dataset of 2,531 tenured and tenure-track geoscience faculty from 62
universities in the United States to evaluate the proportion of women by
rank and discipline. We find that 27% of faculty are women. The
fraction of women in the faculty pool decreases with rank, as women
comprise 46% of assistant professors, 34% of associate professors, and
19% of full professors. We quantify the attrition of women in terms of
a fractionation factor, which describes the rate of loss of women along
the tenure track and allows us to move away from the metaphor of the
‘leaky pipeline’. Efforts to address inequities in institutional culture
and biases in promotion and hiring practices over the past few years may
provide insight into the recent positive shifts in fractionation factor.
Our results suggest a need for 1:1 hiring between men and women to reach
gender parity. Due to significant disparities in race, this work is most
applicable to white women, and our use of the gender binary does not
represent gender diversity in the geosciences.