The gender debate: is midwifery education ‘women's work’?

Author:

Chenery-Morris Sam1,Divers Jo2

Affiliation:

1. Dean of School of Nursing, Midwifery and Public Health, University of Suffolk

2. Associate Dean, Learning, Teaching and Student Experience, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Public Health, University of Suffolk

Abstract

This series of six articles is inspired by themes arising from the Royal College of Midwives State of Midwifery Education report. The series explores the current landscape and challenges in educating the future midwifery workforce, particularly those that pertain to the higher education workforce. This second article highlights some of the inequalities experienced by the majority female midwifery education workforce and their impact, exploring how these inequalities are symptomatic of many of the inequalities women experience more generally within patriarchal structures. The article examines if midwifery education is ‘women's work’, and how this can work to impede progression in leadership, research and scholarship for midwifery academics. How midwifery curricula can influence the future academic workforce in dismantling inequality is also considered.

Publisher

Mark Allen Group

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