Societal inequalities amplify gender gaps in math
Breda, Thomas; Jouini, Elyès; Napp, Clotilde (2018), Societal inequalities amplify gender gaps in math, Science, 359, 6381, p. 1219-1220. 10.1126/science.aar2307
Type
Article accepté pour publication ou publiéDate
2018Nom de la revue
ScienceVolume
359Numéro
6381Éditeur
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Pages
1219-1220
Identifiant publication
Métadonnées
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur(s)
Breda, Thomas
Paris-Jourdan Sciences Economiques [PSE]
Jouini, Elyès
CEntre de REcherches en MAthématiques de la DEcision [CEREMADE]
Napp, Clotilde

CEntre de REcherches en MAthématiques de la DEcision [CEREMADE]
Résumé (EN)
While gender gaps in average math performance are now close to zero in developed countries, women are still strongly underrepresented among math high performers (1). This gender gap contributes to the underrepresentation of women in math and science in higher education and to their subsequent worse position in the labor market (2, 3). With the roles of nature and nurture (4–6) on gender performance gaps having been debated for more than a century, research in the 1990s and 2000s (7–9) suggested a cultural origin, relating gender gaps in math to measures of countries' gender inequality. However, with more recent studies (10–12) having shown that this relation is weak, today we have no clearly identified relationship between countries' socioeconomic or cultural environment and the gender gap in math. We relate below gender gaps in math to societal inequalities that are not directly related to gender. We find a strong and robust relationship and provide tests suggesting that it is causal: Countries that are generally more egalitarian, or that have institutions more conductive to equality, have a lower gender performance gap in math, suggesting that this gap is partly shaped by more general societal inequalities.Mots-clés
gender gaps; mathPublications associées
Affichage des éléments liés par titre et auteur.
-
Girls' comparative advantage in reading can largely explain the gender gap in math-intensive fields Napp, Clotilde; Thomas, Breda (2019) Article accepté pour publication ou publié
-
Jouini, Elyès; Karehnke, Paul; Napp, Clotilde (2018) Article accepté pour publication ou publié
-
Heterogeneous beliefs and asset pricing : an analysis in terms of pessimism, doubt and risk aversion Jouini, Elyès; Ben Mansour, Selima; Napp, Clotilde (2006) Communication / Conférence
-
Napp, Clotilde; Jouini, Elyès; Ben Mansour, Selima (2006) Communication / Conférence
-
Jouini, Elyès; Napp, Clotilde; Nocetti, Diego (2008) Article accepté pour publication ou publié