This article is an examination of the history of gender demographics in the field of librarianship. The historic development and subsequent feminization of librarianship continues to influence the gender wage gap and the disproportionate leadership bias in the field today. This article examines the stereotyping of librarians and the cyclical effect of genderizing the profession. Consideration of current trends and data in librarian demographics demonstrates a consistent decrease in gender diversity, accompanied by a troubling lack of women leaders and executives. Additionally, this article explores options for combating the gender perceptions that negatively impact women in library and information science fields, including management and ...
Most librarians are women, yet the library profession has devoted little attention to the unequal st...
Most librarians are women, yet the library profession has devoted little attention to the unequal st...
Most librarians are women, yet the library profession has devoted little attention to the unequal st...
This article is an examination of the history of gender demographics in the field of librarianship. ...
This article reviews post-1974 scholarly literature on women’s leadership in academic libraries, wit...
This article reviews post-1974 scholarly literature on women’s leadership in academic libraries, wit...
***Reprinted with permission. No further reproduction is authorized without written permission from ...
Librarianship has long been viewed as a “pink collar” profession, meaning a predominantly female pro...
Librarians, as an occupational group, appear to have received surprisingly little attention from t...
The gender wage gap impacts millions of women throughout the US and world, with women in the US maki...
For academic librarians, especially those in tenure-track positions, publishing is a necessity for t...
Librarianship has long been viewed as a “pink collar” profession, meaning a predominantly female pro...
Using data from the 2003 National Survey of College Graduates, this paper examines earnings in the l...
Permission to archive original author manuscript (preprint)Academic librarianship is a heavily femin...
Librarianship is a feminized profession, and like teaching, nursing, and social work with which it s...
Most librarians are women, yet the library profession has devoted little attention to the unequal st...
Most librarians are women, yet the library profession has devoted little attention to the unequal st...
Most librarians are women, yet the library profession has devoted little attention to the unequal st...
This article is an examination of the history of gender demographics in the field of librarianship. ...
This article reviews post-1974 scholarly literature on women’s leadership in academic libraries, wit...
This article reviews post-1974 scholarly literature on women’s leadership in academic libraries, wit...
***Reprinted with permission. No further reproduction is authorized without written permission from ...
Librarianship has long been viewed as a “pink collar” profession, meaning a predominantly female pro...
Librarians, as an occupational group, appear to have received surprisingly little attention from t...
The gender wage gap impacts millions of women throughout the US and world, with women in the US maki...
For academic librarians, especially those in tenure-track positions, publishing is a necessity for t...
Librarianship has long been viewed as a “pink collar” profession, meaning a predominantly female pro...
Using data from the 2003 National Survey of College Graduates, this paper examines earnings in the l...
Permission to archive original author manuscript (preprint)Academic librarianship is a heavily femin...
Librarianship is a feminized profession, and like teaching, nursing, and social work with which it s...
Most librarians are women, yet the library profession has devoted little attention to the unequal st...
Most librarians are women, yet the library profession has devoted little attention to the unequal st...
Most librarians are women, yet the library profession has devoted little attention to the unequal st...