This article explores publication patterns across 10 prominent political science journals, documenting a significant gender gap in publication rates for men and women. We present three broad findings. First, we find no evidence that the low percentage of female authors simply mirrors an overall low share of women in the profession. Instead, we find continued underrepresentation of women in many of the discipline’s top journals. Second, we find that women are not benefiting equally in a broad trend across the discipline toward coauthorship. Most published collaborative research in these journals emerges from all-male teams. Third, it appears that the methodological proclivities of the top journals do not fully reflect the kind of work that f...
In the most prestigious journals of many disciplines, female researchers are underrepresented. To be...
This paper examines whether women and men publish journal articles at a level comparable with their ...
We show articles published in “top-five” economics journals authored by men are cited less than arti...
This article explores publication patterns across 10 prominent political science journals, documenti...
Political science, like many disciplines, has a “leaky-pipeline” problem. Women are more likely to l...
Abstract: Accumulated evidence identifies discernible gender gaps across many dimensions of professi...
This article updates and broadens research undertaken eight years ago on the status of women in UK...
Publications have become the single most important factor of career evaluation in the social science...
IntroductionI investigated the authorship gender gap in research on political psychology. MethodsThe...
Publishing has a variety of functions for academics. The most significant of these is linked to este...
In this comment on Dion, Sumner, and Mitchell’s article “Gendered Citation Patterns across Political...
This article examines the impact of gender on researchers’ journal selection decisions, and thereby ...
The past academic gender literature has focused on the underproduction of academic women in research...
Despite significant advances in women's status in political science departments in New Zealand and i...
Previous studies have documented a “gender citation gap” in political science, whereby women are les...
In the most prestigious journals of many disciplines, female researchers are underrepresented. To be...
This paper examines whether women and men publish journal articles at a level comparable with their ...
We show articles published in “top-five” economics journals authored by men are cited less than arti...
This article explores publication patterns across 10 prominent political science journals, documenti...
Political science, like many disciplines, has a “leaky-pipeline” problem. Women are more likely to l...
Abstract: Accumulated evidence identifies discernible gender gaps across many dimensions of professi...
This article updates and broadens research undertaken eight years ago on the status of women in UK...
Publications have become the single most important factor of career evaluation in the social science...
IntroductionI investigated the authorship gender gap in research on political psychology. MethodsThe...
Publishing has a variety of functions for academics. The most significant of these is linked to este...
In this comment on Dion, Sumner, and Mitchell’s article “Gendered Citation Patterns across Political...
This article examines the impact of gender on researchers’ journal selection decisions, and thereby ...
The past academic gender literature has focused on the underproduction of academic women in research...
Despite significant advances in women's status in political science departments in New Zealand and i...
Previous studies have documented a “gender citation gap” in political science, whereby women are les...
In the most prestigious journals of many disciplines, female researchers are underrepresented. To be...
This paper examines whether women and men publish journal articles at a level comparable with their ...
We show articles published in “top-five” economics journals authored by men are cited less than arti...