81 |
Promoting Sustainable Change: A Toolkit For Integrating Gender Equality and Diversity in Research and Innovation SystemsFältholm, Y., Wennberg, P., Wikberg Nilsson, Å., GENOVATE partner institutions 04 1900 (has links)
Yes / ”Promoting sustainable change” provides answers to
those and similar questions and encourages people to
learn more about gender equality and diversity in research
and innovation systems. This is a toolkit for experienced
and new innovators as well as for people who want to learn
more about how understanding gender and diversity can
lead to more innovation in their everyday lives. / FP7
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Gender Equality Guide for Policy Making in Higher Education InstitutionsGENOVATE partner institutions January 2016 (has links)
Yes / Higher Education [HE] policy makers play a major role in the application of international standards on
gender equality. Depending on the particular characteristics of each Higher Education organisation,
this responsibility is borne and/or shared by specific actors that may be located in Human Resources
departments, and/or could be strategically placed throughout the organisational structure. It also
rests on the actions and commitment of senior leaders and managers, who are visual and powerful
champions for structural change. Either way, policy actors are particularly involved in monitoring
and evaluation processes, and policy implementation, as well as legitimation of gender equality
standards. Therefore, it is fundamental to work with a clear roadmap to integrate gender equality
into organisational change, which would sustain context-specific, legally compliant and responsive
policies that meet international and national standards of gender equality and non-discrimination.
Accordingly, this resource offer a hands-on and transparent approach to gender mainstreaming in
Higher Education institutions, constituting a support tool for policy makers and actors involved in
policy development and implementation, which is key for regulating and legitimating organisational
transformation along gender sensitive, gender competent, gender balanced and gender equal
principles. / FP7
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Developing Learning Circles: ‘Sharing and Learning’ from the GENOVATE ProjectGENOVATE partner institutions January 2016 (has links)
Yes / Research institutions, universities and organisations at large have a growing interest for gender equality
and diversity to be integrated into all stages of research and innovation including strategic planning,
promotion, recruitment, performance reporting and transformation. Creating and finding open spaces
where these processes can be approached from different perspectives, in which multiple stakeholders
can express and share their interests and experiences, and where critical conversations, discussions
and knowledge sharing can take place is fundamental for advancing collaborative projects and actions
aimed at profound organisational change. Learning Circles, therefore, are useful resources that
facilitate organisational safe spaces where multiple stakeholders from different backgrounds, sectors,
disciplines, and nationalities reflect, in a relaxed and collaborative atmosphere, about gender equality
and diversity as collective projects; and their impact and relevance for/in research and innovation fields.
The advantages of Learning Circles are manifold: they represent intersectional, interdisciplinary and
even transnational arenas and opportunities for experience sharing, and knowledge generation/transfer. / FP7
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Naming the parts: a case-study of a gender equality initiative with academic womenÓ Gráda, A., Ní Laoire, C., Linehan, C., Boylan, G., Connolly, L. January 2015 (has links)
Yes / This paper aims to seek to contribute to current debates about the effectiveness of different types of gender equality interventions in the academic context. This paper presents an argument for the need to move beyond an individual-structural dichotomy in how such interventions are perceived. The paper draws on an action-research case-study, the Through the Glass Ceiling project, to challenge the idea that “individual”/single-actor interventions serve only to reinforce underlying inequalities by attempting to “fix the women”.It is suggested that actions that support women in their careers have the potential to achieve a degree of transformation at individual, cultural and structural levels when such actions are designed with an understanding of how individuals embody the gendered and gendering social structures and values that are constantly being produced and reproduced within society and academia. The case study highlights the benefits of supporting individuals as gendered actors in gendering institutions and of facilitating the development of critical gender awareness, suggesting that such interventions are most effective when undertaken as part of an integrated institutional equality agenda. By calling attention to the ongoing mutual construction of actors and practices in organizations, this paper seeks to make both a conceptual contribution to how we understand the (re)production and potential transformation of gender relations in academia and to influence wider policy dialogues on diversity at work. / FP7
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Gender and gender equality in academia and at LTUFältholm, Y., Wennberg, P. 25 March 2015 (has links)
No / FP7
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86 |
From ‘Greening’ Transformation to Gender Diversity Change Programme: University of Bradford’s ExperienceArchibong, Uduak E., Karodia, Nazira, Hopkinson, Peter G. 09 1900 (has links)
No / FP7
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87 |
Gender aware recruitment and promotion practices at Luleå University of TechnologyFältholm, Y., Andersson, E. 09 1900 (has links)
No / FP7
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88 |
The GENOVATE project at UNINA: transforming academic culture for gender equality in research and innovationPicardi, I., Pisanti, O. 09 1900 (has links)
No / FP7
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89 |
The Psychology of Transference: Gender and Access to Training—the Mechanisms of DisadvantageMcIntosh, Bryan, Prowse, Julie M., Archibong, Uduak E. 17 July 2015 (has links)
No / Within nursing, career breaks have an impact on women's career outcomes. However, the causal mechanisms that explain the transfer of women's relative reduced career outcomes remain unclear. This article examines the relationships between career breaks, part-time working, and access to training/updating skills in determining nurses' career outcomes. We consider this to be a mechanism of transferring disadvantage both within and between genders within nursing.
This qualitative research involved in-depth interviews with 32 registered female nurses with and without children. They were employed in “acute” nursing and worked as registered Band 4 to “senior nurse managers” and were between 25 and 60 years old. They worked or had worked under a variety of employment conditions. Some, but not all, had taken career breaks or requested or attained postregistration training.
We found that restricted access to training for part-time nurses and limited opportunity to update their skills following a return from a career break are determining factors affecting the career outcomes of nurses. The findings suggest that it is related to rationing of training for those returning from career breaks, based on the availability of a supply of newly qualified nurses meeting the numerical demand, financial constraints, operational imperatives, and organizational values.
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From liberal feminist to social constructionist approaches – Research school for women and other gender equality interventions at Luleå University of TechnologyFältholm, Y., Berg-Jansson, A. 06 1900 (has links)
No / FP7
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