17 mars 2013
‘Manifesto for Change’ for women in higher education
By Katherine Forestier. Hong Kong: zero. Japan: 2.3. India: three. Kuwait: three. Turkey: seven. UK: 14. Australia: 17. The numbers tell a story. They are the percentages of universities that have women as leaders in a range of jurisdictions around the world. Knowledge that women are under-represented in the upper echelons of higher education is not new. But after academics from countries in Asia, Europe, the Middle East and North Africa shared experiences and information, they came up with an action plan for change. On 6 March the “Manifesto for Change” was resoundingly endorsed by participants attending the session “Action for Women in Higher Education Leadership” at the Going Global 2013 conference, the culmination of a year of workshops held by the British Council in Hong Kong, Japan, Kuwait and finally Dubai, supported by new research. The manifesto calls for actions to hold institutions to account by: including gender equity in ranking and quality indicators; transparency about the representation of women, including their participation in research – usually the stepping stone to leadership; a commitment to invest in women; and the need for more international data on and research into what is holding women back, and what enables success. Read more...
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