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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11129/2508

Title: Academic Employment and Gender: A Turkish Challenge to Vertical Sex Segregation
Authors: Healy, Geraldine
Özbilgin, Mustafa
Aliefendioğlu, Hanife
Queen Mary, University of London, Center for Business Management, Eastern Mediterranean University, Faculty of Communication and Media Studies
TR218887
Keywords: Units
Industrial Relations & Labor
women
Higher-Education
University
Teachers
Education
Employment
Gender
Issue Date: Jul-2005
Publisher: Sage Publications
Citation: G. C. M. D. Healy, Mustafa Ozbilgin, Hanife Aliefendioglu (2005) Academic Employment and Gender, A Turkish Challenge to Vertical Se Segregation in European Journal of Industrial Relations 11: 2 pp: 242-264.
Abstract: This article explores the paradox of women’s academic employment in Turkey. There is a low rate of female labour market participation in the formal sector, yet a higher proportion of women professors than in any of the 25 European Union countries. We use a range of data to set the Turkish labour market and its higher education sector in comparative European perspective, then present findings from two qualitative studies of Turkish professors, concluding that ideological state support rather than legal frameworks of equal opportunities laid the foundations for women’s hierarchical achievements in Turkey. However, the explanation is multilayered and lies in the cumulative and interrelated effect of state policy, institutional transparency, increased labour demand, the home–work interface, and the agency of the professors themselves.
Description: Due to copyright restrictions, the access to the publisher version (published version) of this article is only available via subscription. You may click URI (with DOI: 10.1177/0959680105053966) and have access to the Publisher Version of this article through the publisher web site or online databases, if your Library or institution has subscription to the related journal or publication.
URI: http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1177/0959680105053966
http://hdl.handle.net/11129/2508
ISSN: 0959-6801 (print)
1461-7129 (online)
Appears in Collections:COM – Journal Articles: Publisher & Author Versions (Post-Print Author Versions) – Communication Studies

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