追求第三使命:探索撒哈拉以南非洲女性在学术参与活动中的参与情况

In pursuit of the third mission: Exploring women's participation in academic engagement activities in sub-Saharan Africa

TECHNOVATION · 2025
被引 3
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

基于对六个撒哈拉以南非洲国家36位女性研究者的访谈,发现制度空白和性别因素共同影响她们参与学术参与活动,可能导致低工资、有限职业机会和有害工作条件,加剧性别不平等。

Abstract

Across the globe, there is a growing expectation for academics to generate societal impact by pursuing a third mission alongside their teaching and research missions. Conceptualised as academic engagement (AE), extant research indicates that academics in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) may face challenges in participating in this activity due to existing institutional voids. Drawing on Bourdieu's practice theory and feminist perspectives on gender, work, and organisations, this article explores women researchers' participation in AE activities in six SSA countries: Zambia, Botswana, Ghana, Nigeria, Malawi, and Kenya. Through semi-structured interviews with 36 women researchers, we found that beyond institutional voids, gender plays a significant role in AE activities in SSA, influencing the women researchers we studied to engage in homophilous networking, embody masculinity, and enhance their competencies. Based on our findings, we argue that taking a micro-level perspective of AE activities in SSA is pertinent. Such a perspective, we found, empowers us to observe how the generation of societal impact through AE activities may trap women researchers (and other minority groups) into a cycle of low wages, limited career opportunities, and harmful working conditions that may not only affect their well-being, but also widen gender inequality in academia and the broader society. • Academics can impact society by engaging with non-academic organisations. • Institutional voids constrain academic engagement (AE) in sub-Saharan Africa. • Networking, embodied masculinity, and enhanced competencies benefit women researchers for AE. • A micro-level perspective sheds lights on how inequalities may be generated through AE.

政治学经济学社会学发展经济学