Abstract

In the last years, there has been a large increase in high-educated and high-skilled people’s mobility as a consequence of the internationalization and globalization, the weakening of research and university systems of sending countries (the “brain drain” process), the increase in skilled demand and improvements in higher education of host countries (the “brain gain” process). At the micro-level, academic mobility has positive consequences on occupational prospects and careers of researchers, both in the short- and long- run. Nevertheless, numerous research studies have demonstrated the challenges of engaging in international academic mobility for people with caring responsibilities, particularly women. Using Italian data on occupational conditions of PhDs collected in 2018 by Istat and modelling multinomial logistic regression analyses, we intend to verify if female researchers are associated with a lower international mobility irrespective their field of study, and the extent to which gender interacts differently in the various fields of study in affecting the probability of moving abroad after PhD qualification. Also, the distinction between long-term and short-term mobility, which has been mainly neglected in the literature concentrating on longer stays, has taken into account. In this respect, short-term mobility is a potentially high-value investment that may be pursued also by those researchers and scientists who cannot move for longer periods, such as women with caring responsibilities. In the literature, it is acknowledged that an experience abroad during early career may have positive effects on future occupational prospects. With our work, we intend to shed light on potential disparities on moving abroad that may exist among researchers in their early career by gender, and which could contribute to leave behind women in academia.

Highlights

  • Internationalization and globalization recently led to a large increase in high-educated and high-skilled international mobility

  • The gender gap in the propensity towards international mobility is positively associated with the length of stay: whilst the difference in the predicted probability of moving abroad is only 1.2% between men and women for shortterm stays, it raises to 2.8% for long-term stays and 3.8% for potential international relocations

  • Women in academia have a lower mobility with respect to their male counterparts, experiencing more often work-family conflicts that tend to limit their traveling during their academic careers (González -Ramos and Bosch, 2012; Jöns, 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Internationalization and globalization recently led to a large increase in high-educated and high-skilled international mobility. At the micro-level, academic mobility has positive consequences on occupational prospects and careers of researchers, both in the short- and long- run (Ermini et al, 2019). The literature suggests that women in academia tend to travel less (e.g., He et al, 2019), and especially those who are not in the humanities (Jöns, 2011). Constraints, especially those related to childbearing and childrearing, have a stronger effect in reducing women’s mobility than men’s (Shauman and Xie, 1996). Due to the work-family conflict, women must be strongly determined and able to balance their professional and private lives for traveling during their academic careers (González -Ramos and Bosch, 2012). The literature on Italy is missing on this topic

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