It is crucial to address staff employment inequities in public higher education institutions. The sector’s political, social, and economic value is fundamental in a diverse society that aspires to inclusivity.
Genuine diversity is critical for teaching and learning, too. Research has shown students benefit enormously from being at universities with diverse teaching staff. They can learn both from those who share or have shared their social and economic experiences, and those who do not.
Key findings
The period under review was from 1994 to 2019. Our findings were drawn from two data sets: the Department of higher education and Training’s postsecondary education data, dating from 1994 to 2002, and higher education management information system data from 2003 to 2018. This was supplemented by secondary data and other information acquired through literature review and document analysis.
Here are some key findings:
There have been gradual increases in the numbers of all previously marginalized groups (women, black Africans, Indians, and Coloureds) in academic staff. However, white men remain the dominant group, especially in the professorial rank. They account for 67% (2,086) of academic staff at a professor post level. The proportion of black African academic staff at the professor level doubled, from 8% (196) in 2000 to 19% (602) in 2018.
There have been significant shifts in the professional support staff category. In 2002, white people accounted for 67% of this group; black Africans accounted for just 22%, while the Coloured and Indian categories were 5% each. In 2018, the proportion of white professional staff declined to 35%, black African staff increased to 41%, Coloured staff increased to 16% (785) and Indian staff increased to 8%.
The non-professional administration staff workforce is the most transformed. For example, 66% of professional and administrative support staff are black African and female; [51% of South Africa’s population is female].
The black African majority is still underrepresented within the executive and senior management echelons. Black Africans make up 37% of the people who hold executive and senior management positions despite constituting 80.9% of the population. Of all the executive and senior managers in public higher education institutions, 45% are women, though women make up 51% of the total population.
By 2018 black Africans made up 58% of the total workforce in this category. The white population group remained over-represented at 20% while its share in the overall population of the country was about 7.8%. The representation ratios of coloreds (17%) and Indians (7%) in non-professional administration staff were also above their proportional representation in the overall population of South Africa, which is at 8.8% and 2.5%, respectively.
Recommendations
There are several ways to speed up the pace of change in university staffing.
Sector-wide mentoring programs could provide support and guidance to early-career academics. This would help them to navigate the academic landscape and develop their skills. These programs should be tailored to address the challenges faced by women, black African academics, and disabled individuals.
Talent management strategies are needed to prepare emerging scholars. Promising academics must be identified and nurtured so they can advance to senior positions.
Universities also need strategies to attract and retain underrepresented groups. This will help to improve gender and racial parity.
On paper, these strategies are already in place at many universities. But they have a fundamental flaw: they’re not intersectional. Racial and gender discrimination do not happen in a vacuum. They intersect with other forms of discrimination.
Mentorship, retention, and support programs at many South African universities tend to focus solely on fostering gender and racial equality. They may not adequately address the complex and intersecting challenges faced by individuals belonging to multiple marginalized groups. Meaningful, lasting change in the country’s university staffing structures requires a far more integrated approach.