Gender inequality in ‘cum laude’ distinctions for PhD students
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| Publication date | 20-04-2023 |
| Number of pages | 14 |
| Publisher | SocArXiv |
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| Abstract |
Resource allocation in academia is highly skewed, and peer evaluation is the main method used to distribute scarce resources. A large literature documents gender inequality, and the explanation for this inequality is homophily: male evaluators give more favorable ratings to male candidates. We investigate this by focusing on ‘cum laude’ distinctions for PhD students in the Netherlands, a distinction that is only awarded to 5 percent of all dissertations and has as its sole goal to distinguish the top from the rest. Using data from over 5,000 PhD recipients of a large Dutch university for the period 2011-2021, we find that female PhD students were almost two times less likely to get a ‘cum laude’ distinction than their male counterparts, even when they had the same doctoral advisor. This gender gap is largest when dissertations are evaluated by all-male committees and decreases as evaluation committees include more female members.
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| Document type | Preprint |
| Note | Includes supplementary materials appendix (22 pages). |
| Language | English |
| Related publication | Gender inequality in cum laude distinctions for PhD students |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/s5b6j |
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