ABSTRACT

Over the past few years there had been a dramatic increase in the number of women entering the surveying profession. Fewer than five per cent of practising surveyors were women, but women comprised twenty per cent of students. Originally published in 1991, Surveying Sisters explores the question of whether ‘more’ would mean ‘better’, either for women surveyors themselves, or for women as consumers of the built environment.

Clara Greed investigates the experiences of individual women surveyors, as well as studying the nature of the male majority. Taking a broadly feminist perspective and using an ethnographic approach, she develops a strong theoretical basis, incorporating the gender, class, and spatial dimensions of the situation, centring round the concept that surveying has its own distinct professional subculture. She traces the historical roots of the profession, and its attitudes to women, and makes constructive suggestions for improving the position of women surveying today.

This was a highly topical study, at a time when the surveying profession was eager to attract more women in order to allay the effects of declining numbers of school leavers and potential ‘manpower’ shortages. It will be of interest to people concerned about issues of gender in disciplines such as sociology, management studies, higher education, urban geography, and women’s studies, and to the women and men who work in the surveying and other built environment professions.

part one|40 pages

Surveying sisters? A study of the position and perceptions of women chartered surveyors

chapter Chapter one|17 pages

Is more better?

chapter Chapter two|21 pages

Conceptual perspectives

part two|46 pages

The historical perspective

chapter Chapter three|15 pages

The background to surveying up to 1900

chapter Chapter four|18 pages

Twentieth century development of surveying

chapter Chapter five|11 pages

Women's presence 1945 onwards

part three|72 pages

Education and practice today

chapter Chapter six|16 pages

The educational context

chapter Chapter seven|18 pages

Fitting into surveying education

chapter Chapter eight|20 pages

The position of women in surveying practice

chapter Chapter nine|16 pages

Getting by in the world of surveying

part four|41 pages

Implications for the built environment and the profession

chapter Chapter ten|19 pages

The influence of the subculture on what is built

chapter Chapter eleven|20 pages

Conclusion