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English
Routledge
18 October 2016
The significance of Higher Education to national knowledge-based economies has made the sector the object of government policies, international monitoring, and corporatization. This radical global restructuring of higher education is gendered in its processes, practices, and effects. Exploring how the re-organisation of the sector has redefined academic, management, and professional roles and identities, this book considers the different impacts of structural change for men and women working at diverse levels of the academy.

Drawing from empirical studies undertaken in Europe, North America, Asia, and Australasia the contributions offer a range of theoretical and methodological perspectives, including large scale comparative data and case studies. They inform what is a key policy issue in the 21st century – the re-positioning of women in the academy and leadership. Despite a range of institutional equity strategies in which women learnt the ‘rules of the game’, this book shows that structural and cultural barriers – often conceptualised through metaphors such as sticky floors, glass ceilings, chilly climates, or dead-end pipelines – have not disappeared as might be expected as the academy becomes numerically feminized.

Each chapter provides an insight into how historical legacies, cultural contexts, geographic locations, modes of regional and institutional governance, and national policies are mediated and vernacularized through practice by localized gender regimes and orders. This book was originally published as a special issue of Gender and Education.

Edited by:   , , , ,
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 246mm,  Width: 174mm, 
Weight:   453g
ISBN:   9781138230545
ISBN 10:   1138230545
Pages:   174
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Further / Higher Education ,  A / AS level
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Introduction: Globalised re/gendering of the academy and leadership 1. Women academics and research productivity: an international comparison 2. Will gender equality ever fit in? Contested, discursive spaces of university reform 3. Emirati women’s higher educational leadership formation under globalisation: culture, religion, politics, and the dialectics of modernisation 4. Leadership characteristics and training needs of women and men in charge of Spanish universities 5. Complexities of Vietnamese femininities: a resource for rethinking women’s university leadership practices 6. Diverse experiences of women leading in higher education: locating networks and agency for leadership within a university in Papua New Guinea 7. Good jobs – but places for women? 8. Executive power and scaled-up gender subtexts in Australian entrepreneurial universities 9. Faculty peer networks: role and relevance in advancing agency and gender equity

Jill Blackmore is Professor in the Faculty of Arts and Education, and Director of the Centre for Research in Educational Futures and Innovation at Deakin University, Australia. She is also a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences, Australia. Her research interests include education policy and institutional governance from a feminist perspective; educational restructuring and organisational change; and equity policy related to the work of education professionals. Recently she has focused on disengagement with, and lack of diversity in, university leadership, international education, and graduate employability. She is the author of Educational Leadership and Nancy Fraser (2016) and co-editor of Mobile teachers and curriculum in international schooling (2014, with Arber and Vongalis-Macrow). Marita Sánchez-Moreno is Professor in the Department of Teaching and School Organisation at the Universidad de Sevilla, Spain. Her research interests include gender and leadership in higher education, and the professional development of these leaders; and educational, cultural, and organisational change, innovation, and improvement. She is a founding member of the Network of Research on Leadership and Improvement in Education, and takes part in the International Successful School Principalship Project, and the international Comenius Multilateral Project Professional Learning through Feedback and Reflection devoted to the training of school leaders. Naarah Sawers is currently a Research Fellow in the School of Education, and teaches in the School of Communications and Creative Arts, at Deakin University, Australia. Her research spans the fields of children’s literature, education, and studies in higher education. Her most recent book is Critical Fictions: Science, Feminism, and Corporeal Subjectivity (2008). She has written for academic journals in cultural studies, literature, and education.

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