探花视频

Athena SWAN is聽imperfect but valuable

Published on
May 17, 2018
Last updated
May 17, 2018

I聽have a lot of sympathy for the issues Rebecca Harrison raised in her opinion article聽鈥淔alse goddess鈥聽(3聽May), in which she argues that Athena SWAN and similar schemes are failing. I聽too am involved with Athena SWAN, and I聽am well aware that, as Dame Athene Donald, professor of experimental physics at the University of Cambridge and equality champion, acknowledged in a blog post of January 2015, 鈥淲e鈥檝e come a long way but鈥︹, 鈥渢oo many departments still think that Athena SWAN means high-profile events, counting how many women professors you have, and trying to get a higher award than the next department鈥.

The 鈥渆motional and intellectual labour of 鈥榮elf-assessment鈥欌, as Harrison puts it, might not be a聽panacea for solving inequality; however, it provides a聽unique opportunity to聽gather evidence and to commit the department or institution to some change. Also, I聽would not underestimate the emotional and solidarity bond that is established among the members of the self-assessment team and the potential for the arts and humanities (included only since 2015) to influence the scheme by recalibrating an overemphasis on numerical data in favour of a聽more narrative approach.

In a blog post of March 2015 titled 鈥50 shades of sexism in the academy鈥, I聽argued that the first step to tackle systemic inequality was to acknowledge the problem, to raise it in public forums and to gather evidence. Second, universities must not become complacent; they must be aware of the risk that policies and programmes (such as Athena SWAN) might become substitutes for action. Third, conscious, structured institutional efforts are needed to counteract unconscious and unintentional biases. Last, quotas can be, even on a temporary basis, the corrections required. Personally, I聽am persuaded by the research on the effectiveness of quotas carried out by Curt Rice and Louise -Davidson-Schmich. Athena is no goddess; she is all of us: human, fallible and yet determined to fight injustice as vigorously as she can.

Anna Notaro
Senior lecturer in contemporary media theory and coordinator of PhD studies, equality and diversity, Athena Swan
University of Dundee
@Notanna1


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