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Challenging the Gender Equality Paradox: Evidence from 50 States, 17 Years, and 21 Million Individuals

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Rong Su, University of Iowa

Description

Semester:

  • Winter 2026

Speakers:

Rong Su: Mahoney Fellow and Associate Professor

Lecture Time:

Fri, April 10, 2026 @ 1:30 pm to 3:00 pm

Lecture Location:

R2240, Ross building

Speaker Webpage(s):

https://tippie.uiowa.edu/people/rong-su

Introduced By:

Wenyuan Yu

Abstract

How does societal gender equality influence gender gaps at the individual level? Contradictory theoretical  perspectives exist on this seemingly intuitive question. While social role theory and the theory of  circumscription and compromise suggest that greater parity in society leads to smaller psychological  differences between genders, gender-essentialist perspectives suggest the opposite. Over the last decade, a  stream of cross-cultural studies supported the latter with paradoxical findings that greater societal gender  equality is associated with larger, not smaller, gender differences in preferences, attitudes, and behavioral  patterns at the individual level. In this talk, I discuss key limitations in previous studies and challenge the  so-called “gender equality paradox” by presenting findings from multilevel modeling with data on the  career interests of 21 million U.S. individuals across 50 states over a 17-year time span. I demonstrate  divergence in the cross-level effects at the within- and between-state levels, with different gender equality  indicators, and across various interest dimensions. This work helps reconcile conflicting theories and  empirical findings and offer new and more nuanced insights into policies and interventions aiming at closing gender gaps.

Recording & Additional Notes

No recordings available.

No additional notes available.