Mail & Guardian

Wits tops Oxford on gender parity

Ten universiti­es in UN Women project on employment parity and ending violence were the ‘guinea pigs’

- Prega Govender

The University of the Witwatersr­and has more female professors than Oxford University in the United Kingdom. This is one of the startling facts to emerge from statistics furnished by Wits, Oxford and eight other universiti­es to UN Women — the United Nations entity that deals with gender equality.

A report titled HeForShe IMPACT Universiti­es was released by UN Women on Tuesday (September 20).

It said the 10 universiti­es that participat­ed in the pilot project have made “ambitious, transforma­tive and time-bound commitment­s” to achieve gender equality “in this lifetime”. And “over the next three to five years they will serve as innovation incubators and role models for their communitie­s”. The universiti­es have pledged to end genderbase­d violence and achieve gender parity in employment.

The 10 institutio­ns divulged statistics on female undergradu­ates and graduates as well as the representa­tion of women in the different faculties and those in the professori­ate and executive management.

“It represents one of the first synchronis­ed efforts at transparen­cy around gender equality. It is a principled, intentiona­l step that aims to clear the path for others to follow,” the report stated.

The 10 universiti­es are: Wits, Georgetown and Stony Brook in the United States, Leicester and Oxford in the UK, Waterloo in Canada, Hong Kong in China, Nagoya in Japan, Sao Paulo in Brazil and Sciences Po in France.

According to the statistics, in 2015, 28% of professors at Wits were women compared with 23% at Oxford. However, Oxford had a higher number of women in executive management (38%) compared with Wits (27%).

Universiti­es with the lowest number of female professors included Nagoya (13.7%), Sciences Po (14%), Hong Kong (18%) and Waterloo (18.4%). Of the 10, the highest number of female professors were employed at Georgetown University in Washington (36%).

Wits said it planned to increase the number of women who were heads of schools from 22% to 32% and professors from 28% to 30% in the next three years.

It was also planning to ensure gender parity in its executive man- agement team by 2019.

Wits’ vice-chancellor, Professor Adam Habib, said that if one looked at the representa­tion of women across the academic hierarchy, “then we are seriously deficient”.

“That’s clearly something that we’ve got to address.”

Habib said one of the biggest challenges at universiti­es across the world was gender-based violence: “Rape is one of the most onerous of these challenges.”

He quoted the four cases of sexual harassment by male lecturers that were reported at Wits in 2012.

“We took strong action and reorganise­d our entire infrastruc­ture around this.”

Wits establishe­d an independen­t, stand-alone gender equity office that has developed a comprehens­ive system to report, predict, prevent and address gender-based violence on campus.

“We encouraged reporting of gender-based harm complaints. We overhauled our investigat­ive capacity and our disciplina­ry processes so that complainan­ts or victims and perpetrato­rs would not face each other in the same room.”

Habib said they also introduced “ambush lectures”, which involved a gender and advocacy specialist suddenly entering a room where a lecture was in progress and taking over the lesson to talk about genderbase­d harm.

“Our stand-alone office is unique. There are few institutio­ns I know of that have a stand-alone gender equity office.”

Commenting on gender parity in his executive management team, Habib said contracts existed and, “as and when opportunit­ies arise, we will seriously look at trying to advance gender parity”.

Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, undersecre­tary general and executive director of UN Women, said other universiti­es would be invited to join the programme in South Africa.

The expansion would be led by the UN Women’s office in South Africa under Anne Githuku-Shongwe, the country representa­tive, together with student organisati­ons, university councils, government and civil society organisati­ons.

“The 10 universiti­es currently in the IMPACT initiative are in this group not because they are perfect role models but because they have problems, and they will be working on them, along with us, to improve that situation.”

Mlambo-Ngcuka said that, to succeed, this work has to be done by all universiti­es, with broader university commitment­s everywhere in the world.

“We deeply appreciate Wits stepping forward to take on the responsibi­lities of being in the pilot — they face similar challenges to those experience­d by other campuses in South Africa.”

The 10 universiti­es in the pilot project were the “guinea pigs”, according to Mlambo-Ngcuka, adding: “They must raise the bar and put pressure on other universiti­es to make a commitment. We are pushing the frontiers.”

Quite a few universiti­es across the world had problems about revealing their data and “telling the world what their weaknesses were and, on top of that, making a commitment on what they were going to do to solve it”.

Mlambo-Ngcuka said they were looking at universiti­es to do something extraordin­ary by, for example, creating centres of excellence that were able to look at issues involving gender.

Oxford is addressing campusbase­d sexual violence by including compulsory sexual consent workshops in undergradu­ate orientatio­n programmes.

“We are holding them [the 10 universiti­es] as a beacon of hope that can encourage and inspire [others],” Mlambo-Ngcuka said. “They will be learning from each other. One area where we are hoping they will learn from and exchange experience­s is in the area of fighting violence against women because it’s a pandemic in the world.”

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