Parenthood and Gender in Russian Academia

Based on data from a survey conducted in November 2021 involving 2,395 economists working in the academic field, the impact of parenthood on both mothers and fathers on elements of academic careers, such as defending a doctoral thesis and publishing productivity, is being analyzed.   It has be...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elena A. Chechik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE) 2023-12-01
Series:Вопросы образования
Subjects:
Online Access:https://vo.hse.ru/article/view/16337
_version_ 1797373919242485760
author Elena A. Chechik
author_facet Elena A. Chechik
author_sort Elena A. Chechik
collection DOAJ
description Based on data from a survey conducted in November 2021 involving 2,395 economists working in the academic field, the impact of parenthood on both mothers and fathers on elements of academic careers, such as defending a doctoral thesis and publishing productivity, is being analyzed.   It has been observed that men successfully balance the arrival of their first child with the defense of their doctoral thesis, while for most women, these events occur sequentially with a time gap. Furthermore, the strategies for combining parenthood with building a professional career among young respondents differ from those of their older colleagues. The older the woman in our sample, the more likely she is to prioritize the "child first, then defense" strategy. Over time, priorities have shifted, and now women are more inclined to postpone childbirth.   Using data from the elibrary.ru library, indicators of respondents' publication productivity were obtained, indicating that, on average, men publish more works indexed in RINC and the RINC core. A similar publication gap has been identified in other countries, with researchers suggesting unequal burdens that women and men bear during parenthood as a possible explanation for this gap. The results of the study do not provide grounds to consider the presence or absence of children as a significant factor explaining this gap. The author considers self-selection among respondents due to barriers within the academic environment and differences in career goals as possible reasons for the publication gap. Both women with and without children are relatively more oriented towards a teaching career, and the presence of a child may strengthen this tendency.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T18:57:24Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f004e883d1ed422289606e61e7fa4419
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1814-9545
2412-4354
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T18:57:24Z
publishDate 2023-12-01
publisher National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE)
record_format Article
series Вопросы образования
spelling doaj.art-f004e883d1ed422289606e61e7fa44192023-12-28T11:14:37ZengNational Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE)Вопросы образования1814-95452412-43542023-12-01410.17323/vo-2023-1633716337Parenthood and Gender in Russian AcademiaElena A. Chechik0European University at Saint PetersburgBased on data from a survey conducted in November 2021 involving 2,395 economists working in the academic field, the impact of parenthood on both mothers and fathers on elements of academic careers, such as defending a doctoral thesis and publishing productivity, is being analyzed.   It has been observed that men successfully balance the arrival of their first child with the defense of their doctoral thesis, while for most women, these events occur sequentially with a time gap. Furthermore, the strategies for combining parenthood with building a professional career among young respondents differ from those of their older colleagues. The older the woman in our sample, the more likely she is to prioritize the "child first, then defense" strategy. Over time, priorities have shifted, and now women are more inclined to postpone childbirth.   Using data from the elibrary.ru library, indicators of respondents' publication productivity were obtained, indicating that, on average, men publish more works indexed in RINC and the RINC core. A similar publication gap has been identified in other countries, with researchers suggesting unequal burdens that women and men bear during parenthood as a possible explanation for this gap. The results of the study do not provide grounds to consider the presence or absence of children as a significant factor explaining this gap. The author considers self-selection among respondents due to barriers within the academic environment and differences in career goals as possible reasons for the publication gap. Both women with and without children are relatively more oriented towards a teaching career, and the presence of a child may strengthen this tendency.https://vo.hse.ru/article/view/16337parenthoodwork-life balanceacademic careerdoctoral dissertationpublication productivity
spellingShingle Elena A. Chechik
Parenthood and Gender in Russian Academia
Вопросы образования
parenthood
work-life balance
academic career
doctoral dissertation
publication productivity
title Parenthood and Gender in Russian Academia
title_full Parenthood and Gender in Russian Academia
title_fullStr Parenthood and Gender in Russian Academia
title_full_unstemmed Parenthood and Gender in Russian Academia
title_short Parenthood and Gender in Russian Academia
title_sort parenthood and gender in russian academia
topic parenthood
work-life balance
academic career
doctoral dissertation
publication productivity
url https://vo.hse.ru/article/view/16337
work_keys_str_mv AT elenaachechik parenthoodandgenderinrussianacademia