Shaping Engineers, Making Gender Politics: Swedish Universities of Technology and the Creation of a Policy Field, 1976–1998
Doctoral thesis, 2023

Despite a global reputation as a gender-equal nation, the labour market in Sweden is segregated. This particularly applies to engineering. Five decades of national gender equality policies and engineering recruitment campaigns have only partially transformed the situation. This thesis combines the study of two parallel and interlinked phenomena: the development of Swedish engineering education and profession, and the evolution of a national gender equality policy field. It examines how the Swedish engineering profession – represented by the universities of technology – from the mid-1970s, responded to demands from both national policies and from within the engineering communities. The push to act went in two directions; national policies pressured universities of technology to take measures, and representatives from the engineering communities often shaped gender equality policies. How engineering educators steered definitions of gender equality and the corresponding solutions in directions that suited their professional needs are at the heart of the analysis here. Drawing on previously unexplored archival sources and interviews and deploying a theoretical framework of professional boundary work (Thomas F. Gieryn), the dissertation argues that the Swedish male-dominated engineering profession, represented by their technical universities, conducted gender equality politics. The study adds to an emerging international research field on the history of gendered engineering (e.g. Amy Sue Bix, Nathan Ensmenger, Laura Ettinger, Mar Hicks, Alice Clifton-Morekis, Londa Schiebinger, Karin Zachmann) and the Swedish historiography of national gender equality politics. It presents Swedish historiography on the gendered culture in engineering and national gender equality policy to an international audience.

reform logic

gender equality

boundary work

engineering education

engineering profession

recruitment logic

Sweden

STEM

Sal Vasa A, Vera Sandbergs allé 8
Opponent: Amy Bix, Iowa State University, US

Author

Malin Nordvall

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Science, Technology and Society

For many years, Sweden has been recognised as a global leader in gender equality. In Shaping Engineers, Making Gender Politics: Swedish Universities of Technology and the Creation of a Policy Field, 1976–1998 Malin Nordvall explores the relationship between the development of engineering education and gender equality policies in the country. The study focuses on how universities of technology responded to demands for diversity and gender equality from national policies and engineering communities.
       The study covers the last two decades of the 20th century, a period of significant political, economic, and social change in Sweden. University expansion and reform became closely linked to the country’s visions of technological modernity, national economic growth, and emancipation when a male-dominated profession adapted to national gender equality policies that emerged in the mid-1970s. As such, the thesis introduces the Swedish political field of gender equality, commonly referred to as “State feminism,” to an international audience. It presents historical initiatives to promote gender equality in engineering education that can offer alternative approaches to the recruitment and marketing campaigns prevalent in engineering gender equality efforts today.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

History and Archaeology

Learning and teaching

Pedagogical work

ISBN

978-91-7905-803-6

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5269

Publisher

Chalmers

Sal Vasa A, Vera Sandbergs allé 8

Opponent: Amy Bix, Iowa State University, US

More information

Latest update

2/17/2023