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Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria Society
Promotion and advancement of science
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Females in the professoriate at The University of Melbourne

A.G. Klein

Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 122(1) xxxi - xxxv
Published: 2010

Abstract

For the first 120 years from its establishment in 1854 the University of Melbourne had an all-male professoriate. Personal chairs were established in 1964 in order to recognise and reward exceptionally distinguished academics that were not heads of departments; the first female professor was appointed to such a chair in 1975. The first female Departmental Head with the title of professor followed in 1979 and our guest of honour, Nancy Millis was appointed to a Personal Chair in Microbiology in 1982 – only the fourth female professor ever. This paper traces the growth in female numbers in the professoriate, which, in 2008, stood at 85 out of about 410 – that is only about 21% - but growing, as outstanding female candidates reach the required level of distinction.

https://doi.org/10.1071/RS10009

© CSIRO 2010

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