Is need-based hiring good for women?
A while ago I was looking at a job opening in one of the world’s best geochemistry labs. Asking people in the know, I got the following advice:
“If you’re gonna apply, do it fast. They don’t hold a traditional search, they just take the first qualified applicant.”
I was taken aback by this, but I don’t know why. After all, this is how positions in the real world are filled. A job needs to be done, so when someone who can do it shows up, they’re hired. A job is not a gift to be bestowed on the winner of a competition; It is something that has to be done. And in the case of this particular lab, the approach obviously works well for them. They are the best at what they do. So I started wondering: Why isn’t this approach used more often. And I wondered some more: Would such an approach help bridge the gender gap?
Pondering the last question, I think that it depends on the cause of the gap. Let’s assume two endmember causes for underrepresentation of female hiring at high levels in academia. The first endmember assumes that everybody in the selection processes that produce male bias is slightly biased against women. The second assumes that a small number of selectors are strongly biased*.
If the second case holds true, then those institutions saddled with such a person will always find an excuse not to hire women no matter what, so the search methodology is irrelevant.
With the first case, if you have a bunch of almost equal people competing for a spot, then subtle biases could end up making the difference that gives the job to a male. But if they simply hire the first qualified person to come along, then that subtle difference shouldn’t matter, as long as the advertising process is open and honest. Obviously, that’s a big if- a first come first serve practice could easily be corrupted by an old boys network**.
On the practical side, A first qualified candidate will generally enhance the productivity of the selectors, as the service commitment would generally be smaller. And if it works faster, it would be more amenable to researchers who have a family to support and can’t wait around for 15 months while a process slowly churns. But I honestly don’t know what the gender breakdown for scientist heads of households is, so I can’t say if that’s gender related or not.
* Note that overt bias is illegal and/or socially unacceptable in a growing number of countries these days. So the sort of person I’m talking about here is someone who claims to be fair-minded in principle, but always finds a reason to disqualify any specific woman who interacts with his sphere of influence. Whether this is done consciously or unconsciously is irrelevant for the present argument.
** Assuming that most labs are run by old boys- otherwise, it could be corrupted by the Nefarious Web of Quazinonymous Women Bloggers in the opposite direction.
4 comments:
I'd have to speculate that the "position open until filled" method would almost always favor someone connected with informal lab network (good ol' boys, or less often hairy-legged feminist bloggers), because it's impossibly easy for someone to say "Hey, there's going to be an opening in our lab soon. Keep your eyes out." or "Psst. Here's the ad for the aboutt-to-be-announced position in our lab, get your application in quick." I'd much prefer to see the fixed date approach.
Also, there's the actual study that everyone has pointed out:
http://www.nas.edu/morenews/20090602.html
I think it's more often the 2nd case anyway. And one of these bad apples is enough, usually, to shift the whole process, especially if they argue persuasively for their favorite male candidates.
Institutions would have to take charge of these committees and make sure these people are not involved in the searching or hiring process.
Note also that sometimes they are women who always find excuses not to hire any other women.
In theory, the 2nd hypothesis- a small number of extreme bigots- should produce a bimodal distribution of gender composition in hiring, with one peak near 50% and another near 0%, depending on whether or not the institution is infected.
Due to the poor counting statistics on academic hiring, it could be tricky seeing these sorts of effects though.
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