Research positions should be filled on the principle of selection on basis of merit. Assessment of the academic excellence of applicants is therefore the key criterion for selection in an appointment process.
So, the academic qualification must be assessed as objectively and factually as possible. However, as they consist of various elements, such as publication output, teaching experience or attracting outside funding – aspects that are firstly difficult to standardize and secondly can be weighted differently – assessment is prone to gender bias.
Gender bias means the systematic distortions which arise from society’s gender stereotypes, internalized role models, and gender-specific prejudices. These subconsciously affect how we look at others, and this can lead to flawed decisions. Studies show that resumés, research applications and scientific publications are assessed differently depending on whether they are submitted with a male or female name. Both men and women rate the performance of men more highly than that of women. Furthermore, in the case of joint authorships, success tends to be credited to male authors rather than female, and the same behavior is viewed positively in a man and negatively in a woman.
So in our society there are gender-specific differences in how the academic performance of applicants is assessed. We all tend to evaluate the performance of women more critically than that of men, or put another way: what men do is more likely to be regarded as brilliant, even if it is comparable or even identical to what women do. Therefore, anyone who is involved in selection processes such as for a job must constantly examine their own views for any prejudices.
How we look at disadvantages that have affected female applicants in their academic career as a result of undertaking family care duties is also relevant. Due consideration should be paid to family leave when assessing performance. This basically also applies to male applicants, however as a rule women still bear the greater share of caring, even in families where men also participate – a situation which studies show worsened still more during the Coronavirus pandemic.
In disciplines where men predominate, homosocial cooptation also plays a part. Homosocial cooptation is when members of a social network tend to recruit new members because they are similar to themselves, and as a result this favors same-sex support relationships. Thus, men have a greater chance of receiving support, and women less so. This also occurs in the informal networks that are crucial in a scientific career and determine the renown of academics in the scientific community.
Therefore, women face a fundamentally different situation to men when applying for a job. They have to prove their personal achievements in the context of these discriminatory factors. So it is important that all those who assume responsibility for appointments recognize these factors, in order to avoid them influencing decisions.