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022_000065/0000

Through a Glass Darkly. Women in the Scientific Elite

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Author
Izolda Takács
Field of science
Társadalomtudományok / Social sciences (12740), Szociológia / Sociology (12846)
Series
Collection Károli. Monograph
Type of publication
monográfia
022_000065/0056
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WOMEN IN TOP LEADERSHIP POSITIONS example, in a healthcare institution, the best doctors are left in the healing process while the administration is entrusted to serious officials."" Thus, it is reasonable to assume that it is not necessarily the best professionals who are hired at the Academy of Sciences and for positions in higher educational institutions, but that mostly men (from the club) will be elected based on lobbying, the aforementioned habits, the Matthew effect, and the categorization based on other gender stereotypes. This fact is further substantiated in the research done by Nora Séllei, who studied women professors at the University of Debrecen, and found that there are no women among the leaders in certain fields at all. “The University of Debrecen has some ‘university’ faculties (this no longer being a legal category), which have as of yet not appointed a woman professor." As management essentially reguires male attributes, leadership attitudes are generally masculine. In addition, the paradoxical situation is described by the study A token helyzet és a meritokrácia illuziója: a kivétel erősíti a szabályt? [The token situation and the illusion of meritocracy: the exception reinforcing the rule?], “women who do get leadership positions will typically be in a token position in high status — ‘manly’ — areas, but this will not reduce prejudices against them; it will increase them due to intensified stereotyping.”’” For this reason, they start to behave like a “man”: that is, they try to adapt to their new roles by picking up masculine attributes. Thus, as a combined effect of the token situation and the chilling climate, assimilation can be interpreted as a phenomenon among the women leaders’? which, in turn, leads to a displeasing result, since the traditionally masculine leadership style is seen as a negative value judgment for women and leads to a less favourable assessment. This is also a disadvantage for work organisations. 150 Czakó, Á.: Szervezetek és szerveződések a társadalomban. Szervezetszociológiai jegyzetek, Budapest, BCE Szociológia és Társadalompolitika Intézet, 2011, 13. Sellei: Professzornök, 267. “These faculties include the Faculty of Law (ÁJK), Faculty of Informatics (IK), Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences and Environmental Management (MEK) and Faculty of Economics and Business (GTK). This means there is not a single woman among the 36 professors working in the above faculties in 2015, and never was one among the 65 professors who were appointed to the faculties in their total lifespan. [There is one female professor on GTK, but she was originally appointed to the Faculty of Economics which has lost its individual status since]” (Séllei: Professzornök, 267). Vida—Kovacs: A token helyzet, 145. Another way of fending off the stereotype is to try to assume the characteristics of a more positively regarded social group (Padilla, 2000, quoted by Block, C. J. — Koch, S. M. — Liberman, B. E. — Merriweather, T. J. — Roberson, L.: Contending With Stereotype Threat at Work. A Model of Long-Term Responses 1¥7, The Counseling Psychologist, 39(4), 2011, 570-600, https://doi.org/10.1177/0011000010382459). “Assimilation refers to the process of trying to attain a more desired social identity by distancing oneself from members of one’s negatively stereotyped group and adopting the characteristics of members of a more highly regarded identity group” (Ellemers, Spears, Doosje, 2002; Roberts, 2005; Thomas, 1993, quoted by Block et al., 577). 15 a 15! DS 153

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