Volume 43, Issue 3 p. 315-338

The underrepresentation of women in science: Differential commitment or the queen bee syndrome?

Naomi Ellemers

Naomi Ellemers

Leiden University, The Netherlands

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Henriette Van den Heuvel

Henriette Van den Heuvel

Leiden University, The Netherlands

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Dick de Gilder

Dick de Gilder

Leiden University, The Netherlands

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Anne Maass

Anne Maass

Leiden University, The Netherlands

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Alessandra Bonvini

Alessandra Bonvini

Leiden University, The Netherlands

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First published: 16 December 2010
Citations: 261
Correspondence should be addressed to Naomi Ellemers, Social and Organizational Psychology, Leiden University, P.O. Box 9555, 2300 RB Leiden, The Netherlands (e-mail: [email protected]).

Abstract

We examined possible explanations for the underrepresentation of women among university faculty, in two different national contexts. In the Netherlands, a sample of doctoral students (N = 132) revealed no gender differences in work commitment or work satisfaction. Faculty members in the same university (N = 179), however, perceived female students to be less committed to their work and female faculty endorsed these gender-stereotypical perceptions most strongly. A second study, in Italy, replicated and extended these findings. Again, no gender differences were obtained in the self-descriptions of male and female doctoral students (N = 80), while especially the female faculty (N = 93) perceived female students as less committed to their work than male students. Additional measures supported an explanation in social identity terms, according to which individual upward mobility (i.e. of female faculty) implies distancing the self from the group stereotype which not only involves perceiving the self as a non-prototypical group member, but may also elicit stereotypical views of other in-group members.