Women's Safety Concerns and Academia: How Safety Concerns Can Create Opportunity Gaps Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • The present work documents the safety concerns of men and women in academia and how these concerns can create opportunity gaps. Across five samples including undergraduate and graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and faculty ( N = 1,812), women reported greater concerns about their safety than did men, and these concerns were associated with reduced work hours in libraries, offices, and/or labs afterhours. Additionally, although we were unable to manipulate safety concerns among women, in an experiment with men ( N = 117), increasing safety concerns decreased willingness to use the library afterhours. Finally, in an archival study of swipe access data ( N = 350,364 swipes), a crime event that made safety concerns salient for women was associated with a decreased likelihood that women worked in their office afterhours and a decreased likelihood that science, technology, engineering, and mathematics women worked in their labs later at night. Collectively, these data suggest that womens safety concerns can restrict their work.

published proceedings

  • SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PERSONALITY SCIENCE

altmetric score

  • 19.9

author list (cited authors)

  • Trawalter, S., Doleac, J., Palmer, L., Hoffman, K., & Carter-Sowell, A.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • Trawalter, Sophie||Doleac, Jennifer||Palmer, Lindsay||Hoffman, Kelly||Carter-Sowell, Adrienne

publication date

  • March 2022