Posted by Ilya Somin:
Data on Women in Legal Academia:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2006_07_09-2006_07_15.shtml#1152425144


   In line with the discussion on the relative paucity of female Supreme
   Court clerks, it is interesting to note that the data show a very
   similar percentage of women in legal academia. [1]According to the
   American Association of Law Schools, 35.3% of law school faculty were
   women as of the 2004-2005 academic year.

   There may, however, be a generational transition going on, since the
   same AALS data show that 48.5% of assistant professors are women (the
   lowest rank of tenure-track faculty members), compared to 25% of full
   professors (the highest rank). Obviously, full professors are on
   average significantly older than assistant profs, and generally come
   from generations where women were less likely to pursue careers in law
   or academia. Other [2]AALS stats show that female faculty are promoted
   to tenure at roughly the same rate as men with 38% of female and 34%
   of male tenure-track faculty hired in 1996-97 being promoted to tenure
   within 8 years; most law schools require tenure track faculty to get
   tenure or leave within 7 years of appointment.

   However, it is still the case that far fewer women than men apply for
   jobs in Legal academia. [3]AALS statistics show that only about 33.6%
   of of the candidates applying for legal academic jobs through the
   Faculty Appointments Register (AKA - the "Meat Market") in 2004-2005,
   were women. This suggests that despite substantial generational
   changes, academic careers are still less attractive - on average - to
   women than to men. Women FAR candidates actually have a higher
   [4]success rate in getting jobs than male ones (18.9% vs. 15.6% in
   2003-2004), though this tells us little in the absence of data on the
   relative quality of male and female candidates.

   I have not studied the literature on the subject in any depth, but I
   tentatively suggest that there are several possible reasons for the
   gender disparity in applications.

   First, the "publish or perish" phase of an academic career usually
   occurs during the first seven years on the job. This is precisely the
   time (late twenties to mid thirties) when people tend to have
   children. Childcare is of course more likely to take up a large amount
   of time for women than for men. While this is not a problem for women
   who don't want children or for those willing to postpone having
   children until their late thirties, such a postponement increases the
   chance of birth defects and may also cause other problems in the
   family. Overall, this problem is likely to deter considerably more
   female applicants than male ones, both because men with children do
   less childcare work and because men can more easily postpone having
   kids until after getting tenure. Obviously, some female academics use
   their time so efficiently that they can simultaneously devote a lot of
   time to childcare and be just as productive as their male and
   childless female colleagues. But not all potential female academics
   are willing or able to take on this challenge.

   Second, you are much more likely to get an academic job if you have
   few geographic constraints. If your best (or only) offer comes from
   University of Southwest North Dakota, you won't have much of a career
   unless you accept. Given the competitiveness of the market, many
   entry-level candidates are going to end up in that position. Men are
   far less willing to move to an unappealing location to advance a
   spouse's career than women are, thus making this dilemma more
   difficult for many female applicants. I would also suspect that more
   female spouses of male academics have careers that can be pursued even
   in an out-of-the-way location (e.g. - teachers, nurses, secretaries,
   etc.) than male spouses of female ones. This factor may be more
   important than most people realize, because elite law school graduates
   who choose to work for a law firm instead of going into academia can
   usually get a job in any city they want. A female elite law school
   grad whose husband or boyfriend refuses to move therefore has a strong
   incentive to choose a firm over academia - even if the academic
   lifestyle is otherwise more appealing.

References

   1. http://www.aals.org/statistics/0405/html/0405_T2A_tit4_7yr.html
   2. http://www.aals.org/documents/2005recruitmentreport.pdf
   3. http://www.aals.org/statistics/0405/html/0405_T11A_newyr.html
   4. http://www.aals.org/statistics/0405/html/0405_T13A_E_14yr-7yr.html#IDX2

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