FAME

Pilar García-Gómez receives FAME Athena Award 2024 from Ellen van Schoten and Jane Murray Cramm.

Females in Academia Moving towards Equity (FAME) is an interdisciplinary, university-wide initiative designed to further the participation, empowerment and achievement of women faculty and women professional services employees of all ranks.

Gender Parity? Gender equity? Don’t we have that already?

The World Economic Forum’s 2022 Global Gender Gap Report found that gender parity is 132 years away, and that the progress towards parity is stalling. The annual monitors of the Dutch Network of Women Professors find that the representation of women academics declines from each step of the academic career to the next. The percentage of woman professors at Dutch Universities increased to 26.7% in 2022 (Women Professors Monitor 2022) but the pace of this growth is also slowing down. There is growing evidence that women face important barriers in academia (Lundberg, 2020), such as lower recognition for joint work (Sarsons et al., 2021) and implicit biases in teaching evaluations, which have direct and indirect impact on promotion chances (Boring, 2017). This is therefore not a time to be complacent but to keep moving toward gender balance and equity goals within EUR.

Mission

Our mission is to contribute to Erasmus University’s equity aspirations. This requires attention to recruitment, empowerment, development and promotion of female staff, and as rapidly as possible. We believe collective advocacy is key. Individually we are a drop, but together we are an ocean!

Vision

FAME wants to be a network of female academics and professional services staff that:

  • Contributes to expanding the inclusive and welcoming nature of EUR.
  • Helps shape policies, procedures and practices that reduce implicit and explicit barriers faced by female employees and so contribute to greater gender balance in academia.
  • Empowers all ranks of females in academia to participate in setting EUR’s research and education agendas, and in its governance structures.
  • Is recognized as a network that inspires females in academia to reach their fullest potential. This network is a safe environment where individuals can find, and act as, role models and mentors, and learn from each other’s experiences.
  • We are seen as an informed and determined advocate for inclusion, equity, diversity, and access. We are a body whose advice is sought by other female networks within EUR and with connections to other female networks in Dutch academia.

Values

FAME is guided in its advocacy, community building activities and governance by five core values - D.R.I.V.E.:

Diversity

We believe innovation, insight, creativity, and decision-making are enhanced when diversity of perspectives is considered. This requires an inclusive environment that values diversity in all its manifestations. Additionally, when lack of gender diversity is the result of barriers faced by women, we are not making the most of the talent available. For all these reasons, diversity is not only a matter of equity, but also of quality.

Respect

Respect for individuals and minoritized groups is key to creating the environment necessary for them, and so all members of our community, to flourish and contribute to the maximum of their ability.

Inclusiveness

Diversity is not sustainable without inclusiveness. We therefore commit to supporting EUR in creating an inclusive environment. All individuals are, and see themselves as, recognized, valued, and equally engaged members of the larger community. We believe this is crucial to ensure individuals not only excel, but also choose to remain, in our community. Only in this way is the EUR able to make the most of all talent that it attracts.

Vocalization

As network, we are vocal, individually and collectively. We hold ourselves accountable for: bringing discriminatory practices and behaviours to the attention of EUR leadership; advocating for change in policies and practices that hinder progress of females and individuals who identify as such. We also hold ourselves responsible for acknowledging when progress is made.

Equity

We strive for equity and equality of opportunities. We also recognize the contribution of role of legacy of discrimination to inequality of opportunities. This means that we must look beyond the stock of individuals’ achievements so as to also consider the impact of barriers faced over time. Adequate support and opportunities are required to remedy all these aspects of inequity.

Activities

FAME organizes activities and offers services specific to women in all ranks of academia across EUR. These include:

  • organizing meetings and information exchange;
  • advocacy;
  • stimulating talent and promoting flow;
  • community building;
  • providing resources;
  • solicited and unsolicited advice to management;
  • mentoring
  • celebrating females who stimulate female talent by organizing the annual Athena Awards.

Check this page regularly to stay informed!

Ellen van Schoten and Hanan El Marroun at the Dies Natalis 2022
Corine van der Sande & Hanan el Marroun
Alexander Santos Lima

Fame Athena Awards

With this year's Athena Award, FAME aims to celebrate staff members and students who stimulate early career female talent within the academic environment and are a true example for others.  

More about the Athena Awards

Take a look at our annual report

FAME Committee members

  • Dr. Siobhan Airey is Assistant Professor in Innovation of Public Law at the Erasmus School of Law. Her academic work examines the role and nature of public law and institutions in the governance of Just Transition, climate adaptation and the UN Sustainable Development Goals, focusing especially on financing. Here, she engages critical legal theory with classical legal research methods, sometimes with bespoke socially engaged research methodologies. As example, a current transdisciplinary research project explores Walking as a legal research methodology and reflective legal pedagogy. More recently, her research examines the governance of knowledge production in academia, using insights from democratic citizen science, epistemic justice, and business and human rights. She has been visiting researcher at the European University Institute, Florence; Australia National University, Canberra, and the Tanzanian-German Centre for Eastern African Legal Studies, Dar es Salaam. 

    Siobhan Airey smiling while sitting at a desk
  • Lucille Brakefield works in the Learning & Innovation team of Erasmus School of Economics. She is the coordinator of the Career Skills programme for third year bachelor students and the Guidance courses for first years. In this position, Lucille coordinates about 30 courses that all focus on student success and skills development. Lucille is motivated to enable students to work and reflect on their personal and professional development. 

    Portrait photo of Lucille Brakefield
  • Dr Gabi Helfert is Cluster Lead/Director of Educational Excellence at Rotterdam School of Management. She heads a cluster of 5 teams, working on educational logistics and learning innovation, with a total of close to 30 employees. She received her PhD in Management from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology. Dr Helfert is also a Steering Committee Member of the RSM initiative on Inclusiveness, Diversity, Equity and Accessibility (IDEA) and leads the working group on inclusive education at RSM.

    Portrait photo of Gabi Helfert
  • Dr. M. Giulia Napolitano is an assistant professor of philosophy at the Erasmus School of Philosophy (ESPhil). She received her PhD from the University of California, Irvine in 2022. Her academic work focuses on the epistemology of beliefs and opinions which appear particularly stubborn, and insensitive to available evidence. She has been working on the epistemology of conspiracy theories, echo chambers, prejudice and stereotypes, and on mistrust in experts. Dr. Napolitano's commitment to achieving social justice is a through line in her research topics and approach, her pedagogy, and her contribution to community activities at ESPhil and EUR.

    Giulia Napolitano smiling
  • Prof. Dr. Irene van Staveren is professor of pluralist development economics at the Institute of Social Studies, The Hague campus. She is a dedicated feminist economist and works on equality and inclusion as well as other urgent themes such as climate change. She is also a columnist for newspaper Trouw on economics and sustainability. 

    Irene van Staveren smiling
  • Dr. Nanneke Winters is an assistant professor in Migration and Development at the International Institute of Social Studies (ISS), Erasmus University Rotterdam. Building on anthropology, feminist geography and critical development studies, her research interests include immobility, migrant trajectories, and translocal livelihoods in Central America and beyond. She is coordinator of the ISS Governance of Migration and Diversity track and ISS liaison for The Hague Southwest Thesis Hub, an educational platform where master's students from different universities conduct research in response to practice-based challenges formulated by residents, local organisations and the municipality. 

    Nanneke Winters smiling

Join us

Are you a female employee of Erasmus University and interested in joining the committee? Please contact us: fame@eur.nl!

Contact us

Email address
fame@eur.nl
Address
Burgemeester Oudlaan 50
3062 PA
Rotterdam

If you have any questions, feel free to contact us.

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