ECIN Replication Package For "Invisible Hurdles: Gender and Institutional Differences in the Evaluation of Economics Papers"
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) Fulya Ersoy, Loyola Marymount University; Jennifer Pate, Loyola Marymount University
Version: View help for Version V4
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Project Description
Summary:
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This replication package accompanies the paper titled "Invisible Hurdles: Gender and
Institutional Differences in the Evaluation of Economics Papers" and includes data and code.
Abstract of the paper:
How might the visibility of an author’s name and/or institutional
affiliation allow bias to enter the evaluation of economics papers? We ask
highly qualified journal editors to review abstracts of solo-authored papers
which differ along the dimensions of gender and institution of the author. We
exogenously vary whether editors observe the name and/or institution of the
author. We identify positive name
visibility effects for female economists and positive institution visibility
effects for economists at the top institutions. Our results suggest that male economists at top institutions benefit the
most from non-blind evaluations, followed by female economists (regardless of
their institution).
Scope of Project
Subject Terms:
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blind review;
bias;
institution;
gender;
publication ;
experiment
JEL Classification:
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A14 Sociology of Economics
I23 Higher Education; Research Institutions
J16 Economics of Gender; Non-labor Discrimination
A14 Sociology of Economics
I23 Higher Education; Research Institutions
J16 Economics of Gender; Non-labor Discrimination
Manuscript Number:
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ECIN-Dec-2021-0660
Methodology
Response Rate:
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Out of 981 editors
in our recruitment sample, 165 editors completed our survey experiment.
Sampling:
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To create our recruitment pool, we
start with a ranked list of top 100 journals by simple impact factors downloaded
from RePEc. Then, we choose 42 journals from this list. From each journal’s website, we
collect names and email addresses of the editors, co-editors, associate
editors, board of editors, and board of reviewers.
If the email addresses are not reported on the journal’s websites, we find the
email addresses either on the personal websites or on department websites of
the editors. This exercise gives us a list of 1029
editors. Some editors appear more than once in our list since they serve on the
editorial board of more than one journal. Dropping these duplicates and
dropping the editors whose abstracts are used in the experiment, we have a list
of 981 unique editors in our recruitment pool.
We conducted a stratified randomization based on the
rankings of the journals with which the editors in our recruitment pool are
associated. To do so, we first categorize the journals into four strata based on their rankings so that we
have an approximately equal number of editors in the recruitment pool in each
category. Within each stratum, we randomly assign the editors in the
recruitment pool to one of the waves of the experiment. Then, within each wave and strata, we randomly assign the editors in our
recruitment pool into one of the four treatments such that we have an equal
number of editors from the recruitment pool in our treatments.
Collection Mode(s):
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web-based survey
Scales:
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A 7-item likert scale was used for one of our questions (subjective quality question).
Weights:
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no weights are used.
Unit(s) of Observation:
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individuals
Related Publications
Published Versions
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