ABSTRACT

This volume examines the criteria of excellence producing inequalities of gender in the daily working environment and evaluation of academics.

Policymakers have increasingly placed emphasis on gender equality as part of a strategy for achieving research excellence, and efforts to reduce gender bias have become mainstream. This book suggests that this goal has remained elusive in practice due to continuing under-representation of women across many academic and scientific fields. Questioning the old structures of male dominance still prevalent in national research policy, the book explores the effects of institutional values and practices on the careers of academics, particularly the academic identities of women and their career developments.

It focuses on case studies drawn from Europe while also highlighting the rise of new forms of public management and a neoliberal framing of the value of academic work, that have a much broader global reach. Using participatory research, the book analyses contemporary forms of "gendered excellence" in an intersectional and international perspective. It will be of interest to junior/senior researchers, teachers, and scholars in sociology, education, gender studies, history, political science and science and technology studies.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Inequalities and the paradigm of excellence in academia

part I|72 pages

“Inclusive excellence”

chapter Chapter 1|17 pages

Are equality and excellence a happy marriage of terms?

How gender figures in the business case for change

chapter Chapter 4|18 pages

An excellent researcher?

Institutional programmatics and organisational strategies in the academic field

part II|78 pages

Constructing excellence

chapter Chapter 6|20 pages

Gender Bias in Peer Review panels

– “The Elephant in the Room” 1

chapter Chapter 7|21 pages

Gendered excellence for business interests

A critical examination of the construction of centres of excellence in the Estonian research policy discourse

chapter Chapter 8|17 pages

Excellence?

Gendered micropolitics in an Irish and Spanish university context 1

part III|84 pages

Reproducing inequality

chapter Chapter 10|21 pages

The bargaining of excellence

Who's (not) appointed by academics?

chapter Chapter 12|16 pages

Excellent and care-less?

Gendered everyday practices of early career scholars in Germany and Austria

chapter |7 pages

Is excellence really so excellent?

An afterword