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by peoplefromibiza
1310 days ago
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> What was the impact of the biases against women towards them working STEM jobs? I guess what OP is saying is that the beneficiaries are largely not people that actually suffered discrimination, they are just people that tick all the boxes. Otherwise it wouldn't take much to find them. |
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You can make an argument that women today are still being discriminated against or are in a disadvantaged position because of past discriminations against women. Therefore the women they hired was an appropriate beneficiary.
As research shows, there is still bias against women in hiring, especially in the resume selection process.
And as research also shows, women don't pursue STEM jobs because of historically induced cultural biases.
If you discriminated against women in the past so that the profession got taken over by men, had only men's in it, men became all the professors, men became all the role models for the profession, it shouldn't be surprising from a sociological level that women today don't find STEM appealing because it's all men dominated and doesn't seem friendly or inviting to them.
How do you break this cycle is a separate discussion, and there's a seperate argument that affirmative action doesn't work.