TY - JOUR
T1 - Job stress amongst female faculty members in higher education
T2 - an Indian experience from a feminist perspective
AU - Venkat, Purnima
AU - Mayya, Shreemathi S.
AU - Ashok, Lena
AU - Kamath, Veena
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 National Science Foundation. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Women academicians in higher education in India have a more rigorous path to follow than their male counterparts in achieving their due professional status. There are several factors that hinder their progress, including patriarchal concepts in certain role expectations from women; stereotyping of women in certain roles; and non-acceptance of women in certain others. The notions about women that have thus got embedded in the higher education sector in India have a negative impact on their career progress. There is also the need to understand the phenomenon of the glass ceiling that women are faced with in their career promotion efforts in higher education and the inequalities they often encounter under male chauvinism. Against this backdrop, the present paper strives to study the factors that contribute to the job stress and dissatisfaction of women in higher education in India, using the constructs of feminism. The paper concludes that understanding these constructs enables the members of the academia to rationally navigate the experiences of women in higher education and to create supportive policies that ensure a sustainable future for academic women with job security, satisfaction, and dignity.
AB - Women academicians in higher education in India have a more rigorous path to follow than their male counterparts in achieving their due professional status. There are several factors that hinder their progress, including patriarchal concepts in certain role expectations from women; stereotyping of women in certain roles; and non-acceptance of women in certain others. The notions about women that have thus got embedded in the higher education sector in India have a negative impact on their career progress. There is also the need to understand the phenomenon of the glass ceiling that women are faced with in their career promotion efforts in higher education and the inequalities they often encounter under male chauvinism. Against this backdrop, the present paper strives to study the factors that contribute to the job stress and dissatisfaction of women in higher education in India, using the constructs of feminism. The paper concludes that understanding these constructs enables the members of the academia to rationally navigate the experiences of women in higher education and to create supportive policies that ensure a sustainable future for academic women with job security, satisfaction, and dignity.
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U2 - 10.4038/sljss.v45i2.8185
DO - 10.4038/sljss.v45i2.8185
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85161629174
SN - 0258-9710
VL - 45
SP - 97
EP - 105
JO - Sri Lanka journal of social sciences
JF - Sri Lanka journal of social sciences
IS - 2
ER -