Although the Maureen Bickley Centre for Women in Leadership is affiliated with the Curtin University, the ideas presented here are not necessarily representative of the policies and opinions of the University. If you have any queries about the Maureen Bickley Centre and what we do, please go to our website.
Showing posts with label women in science. Show all posts
Showing posts with label women in science. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

2011 Clare Burton Memorial Lecture - coming to a city near you!

The 2011 Clare Burton Memorial Lecture is touring Australian capital cities in October and November.  This year, Dr Cordelia Fine, will speak on:

"How the New Neurosexism Helps Sustain the Status Quo: 
Charting the journey from scanner to sound bite to society".  

It sounds fascinating and brain-bending!

For details of Dr Fine's lecture, read on...

For as long as there has been brain science there have been - in retrospect - misguided explanations and justifications of sex inequality: women's skulls are the wrong shape; their brains are too small; their hemispheres too unspecialised. These hypotheses eventually find themselves hurled on the scientific scrap heap - but not before they become part of cultural lore, and reinforce social attitudes about men and women in ways that hinder progress towards greater sex equality.

It is still happening.

In this lecture Cordelia will show how contemporary social attitudes about gender subtly shape the neuroscience of sex differences and, less subtly, its popularisation. These over-confident claims about 'his brain' and 'her brain' then reinforce old-fashioned gender stereotypes.  Evidence is growing that these stereotypes, invigorated by neurosexism, can influence attitudes and behaviours in the workplace in self-fulfiling ways. Neurosexism, in other words, helps to sustain the very differences it is supposed to explain.

About the speaker...


Dr Cordelia Fine is an academic psychologist and writer. Cordelia studied Experimental Psychology at Oxford University, followed by a M.Phil in Criminology at Cambridge University. She was awarded a Ph.D. in Psychology from the University College London. She is currently based at the University of Melbourne, as an Associate Professor in the Centre for Ethical Leadership at the Melbourne Business School.

If you want to read up before the lecture...


Cordelia has authored two books - her latest book Delusions of gender: How minds, society, and neurosexism create difference was short-listed for the Best Book of Ideas Prize 2011, the Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Non-Fiction 2011 and the prestigious John Llewellyn Rhys Prize 2010.
Cordelia is also the author of A Mind of Its Own: How your brain distorts and deceives.

Dates around Australia

  • Wednesday 26th October - Melbourne
  • Thursday 27th October - Sydney
  • Monday 31st October - Adelaide
  • Friday 4th November - Brisbane
  • Friday 11th November - Perth

For details of these events, please visit the ATN WEXDEV site

Monday, September 19, 2011

Gender, Work and Organisation 2012 - Call for Abstracts


Gender, Work and Organisation will be holding their 7th Biennial International Interdisciplinary Conference from 27th - 29th June 2012 at Keele University, Staffordshire, UK.

Attracting gender researchers from around the globe, the conference is a forum for debate and analysis of a variety of issues in relation to management, work and organisation, and gender studies. Amongst the 21 streams planned for the 2012 conference are:

  • Gender in Global Knowledge Organisations
  • Career and Transition: Women Crossing Boundaries
  • Gender in Science Institutions and Knowledge Systems
  • Inequity amongst low paid women workers
  • "New Masculinities?" Reshaping the Discourse

The call for abstracts for the 2012 conference is now open, with further information and a full list of the 21 streams available at: GWO2012 Call for Abstracts and Information.


Monday, April 19, 2010

New Books and Recent Reports

Some newly published books and recently released reports have caught our eyes at the Maureen Bickley Centre...

New Books
I was delighted to see that Fremantle Arts Centre Press has just published Lekkie Hopkins (a colleague from my previous university) and Lynn Roarty’s book about Pat Giles.


Pat Giles is known to many in Australia for her commitment to improving the lives of the disadvantaged. Among her many contributions and achievements she was elected as an Australian Labour Party Senator a role she held for twelve years. She was also an organiser with the Hospital Employees Union of Western Australia, a founding member and inaugural convener of the Women's Electoral Lobby (WEL) in Western Australia, the first woman on the executive of the West Australian Trades and Labour Council, Chairperson of the first Australian Council of Trade Unions Women's Committee and completed three terms as President of the International Alliance of Women.

Recently Released Reports
Three recently released reports caught our attention. The first is Changing Cultures Changing Attitudes - A National Survey on Community Attitudes to Violence Against Women released on April 7, 2010 by the Hon Tanya Plibersek, MP, Federal Minister for the Status of Women. Although the report noted some gains in that attitudes about violence against women are changing for the better significant challenges remain and violence against women remains a major issue. The full report is available here. I also think we need more research to show the impact of violence on women’s work and their careers. Let us know if you are aware of research being undertaken in this area or any relevant reports that have been released.

A second major report is Women in Science in Australia: Maximising Productivity, Diversity and Innovation by Professor Sharon Bell which was released by the Federation of Australian Scientific and Technological Societies in October 2009. The report shows that women’s progress in science over the past 15 years has stalled despite improvements in their participation rates at undergraduate and post graduate levels. The report highlighted persistent structural barriers to women in senior positions in science and technology, female professional scientists earning less than their male counterparts and harassment and discrimination continue to be major issues. The full report is available through the FAST website. This report is particularly timely given Australia’s focus on skill and labour shortages. However, one wonders how many research organisations and funding agencies will rise to the author’s challenge to change their practices including the need for improved flexibility and a range of career paths that have as a central focus the attraction and retention of women. It will be an interesting space to monitor for change!!

The third report that captured our attention (perhaps no surprise we are located in a graduate school that has an MBA as one of its major programs) was Catalyst’s report Pipeline’s Broken Promises - a second report from their longitudinal project, The Promise of Future Leadership: A Research Program on Highly Talented Employees in the Pipeline.

The project surveys graduates of leading business schools in the US, Canada, Europe, and Asia and highlights the differences in women's and men's career experiences and satisfaction. It challenges the myth that women just haven’t been in the pipeline long enough and that this is what explains their absence in senior roles and the persistence of the gender pay gap. Of concern for women is that despite women’s increased participation in education and employment inequality remains entrenched and that women from elite MBA programs lagged men in terms of career advancement and salary from their first appointment following graduation. Perhaps not surprisingly women were also less satisfied with their careers. The full report is available from the Catalyst website. What are your thoughts on how organisations and for that matter universities teaching MBA programs might address this issue of gender inequality?