Becoming and being academic women in Cambodia: Cultural and other understandings

Cambodia’s higher education is under development. This is the first study of the role of women teaching in a university in Cambodia. There has been many studies of academic women in western countries and these guided the 16 interviews in Khmer that were carried out by young female researchers, trans...

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Main Authors: TW Maxwell, Sokhany Nget, Kunthy Am, Leakhna Peou, Songly You
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2015-12-01
Series:Cogent Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2015.1042215
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spelling doaj-1b613b574aba402da1325a2100dd83222020-11-25T01:46:32ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Education2331-186X2015-12-012110.1080/2331186X.2015.10422151042215Becoming and being academic women in Cambodia: Cultural and other understandingsTW Maxwell0Sokhany Nget1Kunthy Am2Leakhna Peou3Songly You4University of New EnglandFlemish Association for Development Cooperation and Technical Assistance (VVOB)East-West International SchoolNong Lam UniversityRoyal University of AgricultureCambodia’s higher education is under development. This is the first study of the role of women teaching in a university in Cambodia. There has been many studies of academic women in western countries and these guided the 16 interviews in Khmer that were carried out by young female researchers, translated by them and then analysed with the assistance of NVivo. Becoming an academic for many Cambodian women meant support from their parents and others close to them. Receipt of an international scholarship may have been critical. Perhaps the most important issue for these academic women was the need to balance demands on their time. Teaching hours could be negotiated, potentially at least, but only where the student numbers warranted it. An affirmative action approach appears to have developed at one of the two universities. Areas for future research are identified.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2015.1042215genderhigher educationacademic workCambodiaSouth-East Asia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author TW Maxwell
Sokhany Nget
Kunthy Am
Leakhna Peou
Songly You
spellingShingle TW Maxwell
Sokhany Nget
Kunthy Am
Leakhna Peou
Songly You
Becoming and being academic women in Cambodia: Cultural and other understandings
Cogent Education
gender
higher education
academic work
Cambodia
South-East Asia
author_facet TW Maxwell
Sokhany Nget
Kunthy Am
Leakhna Peou
Songly You
author_sort TW Maxwell
title Becoming and being academic women in Cambodia: Cultural and other understandings
title_short Becoming and being academic women in Cambodia: Cultural and other understandings
title_full Becoming and being academic women in Cambodia: Cultural and other understandings
title_fullStr Becoming and being academic women in Cambodia: Cultural and other understandings
title_full_unstemmed Becoming and being academic women in Cambodia: Cultural and other understandings
title_sort becoming and being academic women in cambodia: cultural and other understandings
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Education
issn 2331-186X
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Cambodia’s higher education is under development. This is the first study of the role of women teaching in a university in Cambodia. There has been many studies of academic women in western countries and these guided the 16 interviews in Khmer that were carried out by young female researchers, translated by them and then analysed with the assistance of NVivo. Becoming an academic for many Cambodian women meant support from their parents and others close to them. Receipt of an international scholarship may have been critical. Perhaps the most important issue for these academic women was the need to balance demands on their time. Teaching hours could be negotiated, potentially at least, but only where the student numbers warranted it. An affirmative action approach appears to have developed at one of the two universities. Areas for future research are identified.
topic gender
higher education
academic work
Cambodia
South-East Asia
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2015.1042215
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