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Gender and the academic profession in contemporary Tajikistan: challenges and opportunities expressed by women who remain
Authors:Zumrad Kataeva  Alan J. DeYoung
Affiliation:1. Institute of Education, National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia;2. Department of Sociology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, USA
Abstract:This article attempts to describe the deleterious impact of higher educational changes affecting female faculty members working in Tajik universities in the post-Soviet era. Over the past two decades, the social and economic position women gained during Soviet times has significantly eroded, bringing enormous challenges to education and higher education access, completion and staffing. The demographic and cultural marginalization of women here has negatively impacted university teaching opportunities and the status of women faculty members. Ethnographic interviews – along with relevant secondary data – reveal that despite various official gender-equity policies announced by the state, female participation issues remain prominent in the university. Our interviewees also report continued difficulty entering higher faculty ranks and leadership positions in university. However, significant numbers of women are still to be found there, and they report a workable compromise between being professional educators and trying to navigate a local culture that is becoming more ‘traditional’.
Keywords:Higher education  gender  academic profession  women faculty  Central Asia  Tajikistan
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