|  | JOINT COMMISSION WORKING GROUP ONUNDER-REPRESENTED GROUPS IN SURVEYING
 
 
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      FIG Working Group on Under-represented Groups in Surveying 
       This Newsletter in -pdf-format ContentsFIG Congress 2006 in Munich ICA Gender and Cartography commission, 
      by Ewa Krzywicka-Blum, Poland Women and Surveying revisted: Two separate 
      Realities? by Clara Greed, UK 
 Once again: There is an open Call for Papers for the FIG Congress 2006 
      in Munich. The deadline for abstracts is 15 March 2006. One of the 
      topics for the call for papers is “Improving participation of 
      under-represented groups”. For more information:
      
      http://www.fig2006.de/e/themes.htm. I would be very pleased to 
      organize one or two sessions concerning this subject with your 
      presentations.  Gabriele Dasse 
 ICA Gender and Cartography 
      commissionBy Ewa Krzywicka-Blum, Poland  The 2005 year may be recognized as a very fruitful period of Gender and 
      Cartography commission of the International Cartographic Association 
      because of two scientific events. The first one was The Open Discussion 
      Forum in Poland (Wrocław, 11-12 February) devoted to basic problems 
      connected with cartographic presentation of under-representation within 
      different societies in the globe, the second – participation of 
      commission’s members in XXII ICC “Mapping Approaches into a Changing World 
      (Coruna, Spain, 11-16 July). GaC commission was responded for organization 
      of two sessions in the frame of 21 themes titled ‘Gender and 
      under-represented groups and cartography’. Such problems as: gender’s 
      diversification of school map understanding (T. Bandrova, Bulgaria), 
      barriers in determination of under-represented groups (e. Krzywicka-Blum, 
      Poland), case of woman in cartography (L. Phalaagae, Botswana), the role 
      of women in the Atlas of Spain (D. Abad, Spain) and Community mapping: 
      changing lifestyles through participation (S. Perkins, UK) were presented. 
      Very interesting appears also two commission’s meetings during the 
      conference. The results of Wrocław’s forum and mentioned discussions above 
      were formulated in the form of 29 propositions for part society of the 
      Agenda prepared by EC of ICA (Prof Kirsi Virrantaus). On commission’s web 
      side first maps in a prepared system of population are accessible ( http://www.geo.ar.wroc.pl/GC/ 
      ).
 The first International Conference on Cartography and GIS 
      (January,25-28, 2006 Borovets, Bulgaria) was an event very interesting not 
      only from the scientific but also interpersonal contacts within several 
      groups of research workers and representatives of organisations from the 
      Central and East Europe (DATAMAP-Europe, ESRI). The open meeting of ICA's 
      Gender and Cartography commission was devoted actual and future 
      activities. Participants considered the question if the consequence of 
      changing profile of terms of reference shouldn't be proposed a new 
      commission's name. Suitable resolution may be accepted during the next 
      General Assembly in Moscow (2007)-  By Ewa Krzywicka-Blum, Chairperson of GaC commission of ICCekblum@kgf.ar.wroc.pl
 
 Women and Surveying revisted: Two 
      separate Realities?by Clara Greed, UK  Twenty years ago I embarked on research on the position of women in 
      surveying, and by the time of its completion in 1990, women composed 5% of 
      surveyors in Britain (Greed, 1990). Whilst great progress has, apparently, 
      been made in the intervening period of time, in 2004 women still only 
      represent just 10% of surveyors in the UK (RICS,2003; Watts,2003) (See 
      Tables 1 and 2). In comparison, women comprised 6% of lawyers in 1974 and 
      they are now comprise 40% of the profession, with more female than male 
      lawyers under the age of 30. The first woman lawyer qualified in the UK in 
      1922 (a Carrie Morrison) and if the current geometric rates of growth 
      continue by 2105 we will see the last male lawyer to qualify and the legal 
      profession will become entirely female (Rose, 2005). In comparison in 1984 
      4% of architects were women, whereas today 10% of the architectural 
      profession is female (RIBA, 2003; De Graft-Johnson et al, 2005). Meanwhile 
      town planning has always attracted more women with female membership of 
      the RTPI running at around 25% of the total but women still compose less 
      than 5% of senior management posts in planning (Greed (ed) 2003). So one 
      encounters a mixed, even contradictory picture, with some aspects being 
      much better and some issues remaining unresolved, or even going backwards 
      in terms of lack of progress. This paper, based on perusing the surveying 
      and property press, and drawing on recent research, seeks to look below 
      the surface and discuss what is really going on in the surveying 
      profession nowadays.  Table 1: Membership of the Built Environment 
      Professions 
 Table 2: Percentages of Women in the RICS 1994 
      and 2004 by Membership Category 
       Source: Raising the Ratio and RICS data
 There is undoubtedly a growth in the numbers of women entering the 
      built environment and construction professions. Whereas in the past one 
      was glad to find any women at all in some of the construction and property 
      professions nowadays they seem, at first sight, to be everywhere and 
      encountering few problems. But this paper argues this is not necessarily 
      so. Whilst there are many more women students, there is a significant drop 
      out after qualification and a continuing attrition of numbers at key 
      stages in subsequent career development (Sweet, 2005). For example, in our 
      recent research on the architectural profession we found that whilst 18% 
      of students were female in 1984, women comprise 33% of architectural 
      students today, but over half never actually went into architecture. Thus 
      the argument that it is only a matter of time before the women catch up 
      does not hold water (De Graft Johnson et al, 2003). Likewise in surveying, 
      according to an article in Property Week (28.5.04) only 55% of those 
      completing RICS surveying degrees go on to become fully qualified 
      surveyors with women disproportionately dropping out. Those women who do 
      persevere find that their salaries are, on average, 27% lower than those 
      of men, according to RICS survey findings published in RICS Business 
      journal in April 2004, pp 20-22.  Nevertheless, there are definitely more women around nowadays in the 
      workplace, in the professions and in management, and the situation is very 
      different from when I first started my own career and subsequent research. 
      There have been many changes, and sometimes improvements, in equalities 
      legislation, maternity rights and childcare provision. There has been a 
      paradigm shift within society itself; it is now acceptable for women to 
      have a career as a well as a family. Many young women take this as 
      'normal' and cannot understand what all the fuss was about, and tend to be 
      embarrassed by the word 'feminism' and appear to have little knowledge of 
      what things were like before women campaigned to change the situation. Yet 
      the situation is far from perfect, and nowadays one must look more 
      carefully at the subtle mechanisms that are at work, controlling and 
      channelling women in certain career routes rather than others.  In Britain 'surveying' encompasses a range of specialisms and careers 
      under the membership of the RICS, ranging from property, urban planning 
      and estate management, where more women are to be found - to the more 
      technological fields of 'real' land surveying, construction and building 
      engineering, where still there are less women. There is no doubt that 
      nowadays one can find some truly spectacular women in very high levels 
      within the professions, government and major organisations, particularly 
      within property and urban planning but also to some extent in surveying 
      itself. For example the Director of the Ordnance Survey in Britain is now 
      a woman, Vanessa Lawrence, a situation that one would have imagined to be 
      impossible 20 years ago. In 2004 for the first time a woman stood for the 
      post of RICS president, Delva Patman, albeit unsuccessfully, and it is 
      likely that the next president of the RTPI will be a woman (Janet 
      O'Neil).The Chief Planning Inspector, responsible for the national 
      development control system is a woman, Katrina Sporle, as is the head of 
      the Office of National Statistics (ONS), Karen Dunnell. We even have a 
      woman Minister for Planning and Housing, Yvette Cooper, who at the time of 
      appointment was a mere 35 years old in July 2005 and was the first 
      planning minister to take maternity leave (see Regeneration and Renewal 
      11.0.3.05 on page 21) but there is criticism of the lack of women in 
      regeneration agencies, expressed on page 20 of the same journal. Whilst 
      there are some individual women in very senior positions in regeneration, 
      such as Lorraine Baldry, chair of the London Thames Gateway Development 
      Corporation (responsible for the huge western expansion of the city's 
      development), others consider that women as a whole are being 'pushed to 
      the margins' within urban renewal bodies and policies (see www.regen.net). 
      The property journals frequently feature successful women who have become 
      partners or directors of international surveying firms. Furthermore, with 
      some significant expectations, one seldom finds such successful 
      figureheads taking a visible line on women's issues and policies. One also 
      notes that some of the most prominent women in international surveying and 
      realty companies are American, as is the case in Jones Lang LaSalle (see 
      'Chicago Hopefuls' 10.06.05 at www.propertyweek.co.uk). This may signify 
      that American women have benefited earlier from equality programmes to 
      forward their career, or that British women are not seen to be as 
      suitable, or possibly less glamorous.  But on closer inspection it is noticeable that some of these 
      appointments are of women who came into 'property' from a generic business 
      background, recruited apparently for their commercial track-record not for 
      excelling in the built environment professions. But there are a few women 
      who do gain success because of their professional and technological 
      abilities, such as Vanessa Lawrence who previously chaired the Association 
      for Geographic Information. The London Eye (the Millennium Wheel) was 
      designed by a husband and wife team of architects, David Marks and Julia 
      Barfield, although it is significant that Julia's name has often been left 
      out in media reports on the design of the Wheel. One also finds women 
      heading urban regeneration schemes and other multi-million pound projects 
      (see Planning 15.07.05, pp 18 at www.haynet.com But at the same time one 
      finds research and articles stating that 'women are pushed to the margins 
      in regeneration', often taking on administrative or public relations 
      posts, rather than strategic policy and decision-making roles. But one 
      does not necessarily find women-friendly employment practices or 
      women-aware urban policy decisions in the organisations that they head 
      (Reeves and Greed, 2005). There have also been some high-profile sexual 
      harassment cases in large surveying firms, although some would say this 
      was the tip of the iceberg as many women do not feel they are in a 
      senior-enough position to speak out. It would seem that nowadays men have 
      a wide range of types of women to chose from, and they are the most likely 
      to select those that 'fit in' and are 'don't make waves' (Monagham, 2004).
       Overall, there seems to be a vast gap between such successful women and 
      the rank and file of women in the built environment professions, 
      particularly in respect of salary and 'bonuses.' This is even more so in 
      the City where a few top women in the financial and property world receive 
      literally millions of pounds in end of year bonuses (like top men) whereas 
      as everyone else struggles to pay their mortgage. But are most women 
      surveyors aware of such inequality, both between men and women, and 
      between women and other women? Many are more concerned about gaining 
      better conditions of employment, than simply money. For example the recent 
      RICS survey, 'Raising the Ratio' found that many women wanted more 
      flexibility in terms of hours in order to establish a better 'home/work' 
      balance (RIC,2003). In our research on why women leave architecture (De 
      Graft-Johnson et al, 2003) we found that many women still encounter a 
      hostile, male, macho office environment. A long hours culture 
      predominated, in which working late into the evening, or even overnight 
      was seen as good practice and a sign of commitment. Instead women would 
      rather 'work smart' rather than 'work long', and many commented that men 
      were slow and tended to achieve very little in spite of working longer 
      hours (De Graft-Johnson et al, 2005).  So to conclude this short paper, quantitatively the situation appears 
      to have improved, but 'more does not necessarily mean better' because 
      qualitatively the 'game' has become more complex (Greed, 2005). More women 
      are now let in to the built environment professions, but sophisticated 
      hidden mechanisms control and delimit their progress. Whilst a few women 
      are always let through and become 'successful' one has to be very careful 
      not to equate this with progress for all. There is an old feminist saying 
      in England, 'while the women were playing tennis, the men were playing 
      football'. In other words one must be very careful to make sure that goals 
      and achievements really are a sign of progress and not an indication that 
      the whole game has changed into something else. For example, whilst women 
      have campaigned for equality in respect of recruitment, job interview 
      procedures and employment practices, it is estimated that over 60% of jobs 
      are filled not by advertisement but by word of mouth, through traditional 
      male networking. Likewise, whilst women campaign for equal pay, in many 
      surveying and, also, architectural firms, there is a complex system of 
      bonuses, perks and benefits that are over and above actual salary. 
      Meanwhile young women continue, bravely, to enter surveying, perhaps 
      over-confident that 'everything is going to be all right now'. They are 
      certainly made to feel welcome as the construction industry as a whole is 
      experiencing a 'manpower' shortage at all levels, manual, skilled, 
      managerial and professional. According to the Chartered Institute of 
      Building, English is not the first language of over 80% of workers on 
      London building sites, and there is going to be a major skills and 
      manpower shortage with all the construction for the Olympic Games. Migrant 
      male labour being a major means of filling skills shortages within 
      construction according to the European Institute of Construction Labour 
      Research (see www.efbh.be and clarkel@wmin.ac.uk). So the situation is 
      more complex than when I did my original research on women and planning, 
      the situation is paradoxical and contradictory with examples of great 
      individual success but also overall marginalisation of women surveyors in 
      many respects.  Many construction, surveying, science and engineering degree course 
      places are also unfilled, as young people, nowadays, seem to prefer to 
      study, law, management studies, media studies, or even environmental 
      studies. They appear to have very ignorant perceptions of the nature of 
      the shunned subjects or the nature and scope of the careers they offer. So 
      the construction industry and property professions are turning to women, 
      ethnic minorities, mature returners, and non-surveying graduates to fill 
      the gap. This results in a curious form of 'equality' in which there 
      appears to be few concessions made to meet the requirements of these new 
      groups. Introducing a more diverse range of groups into the built 
      environment professions should result in changes in work practices and 
      organisational culture: or perhaps it will simply result in people trying 
      it for a while and then leaving out of frustration - at huge personal and 
      financial cost.  As for 'getting more women' into surveying, the profession is still 
      besotted by the idea of recruiting young women. For example a recent 
      article stated, 'it's time people realised surveying is sexy and cool' 
      Property Week 28.05.04, and included three case studies of successful 
      young women surveyors in their twenties. Likewise an item in RICS Business 
      February 2006, page 30-21 on 'narrowing the gender gap' stressed that 
      being young and female can be a positive advantage in today's property 
      professions. But there was no mention of the problems that women surveyors 
      are likely to encounter when they start families, or when they get older 
      and want to be promoted into more senior jobs. Perhaps the ideal woman 
      surveyor, is the eternally young woman surveyor! Meanwhile all the other 
      women surveyors live their lives, and strive to achieve respect and 
      credibility in their chosen profession. Undoubtedly some things have got 
      better but we are not there yet. How all this will turn out in say ten 
      years time who knows? Will surveying as we know it still exist? Will the 
      profession still want women? Will women still want to go into surveying?
       References 
        De Graft-Johnson,A., Manley,S. and Greed,C. (2003) Why do women 
        leave architecture RIBA commissioned study, (London, Royal Institution 
        of British Architects) see 
        www.riba.org.uk for full report, summary and RIBA response 
        documents.Greed,C (1990) Surveying Sisters: Women in a Traditional Male 
        Profession London and New York: Routledge.Greed,C. (ed) (2003) Report on Gender Auditing and Mainstreaming: 
        Incorporating case studies and pilots, Research Report edited by C.Greed, 
        with research contributions by Linda Davies, Caroline Brown and 
        Stephanie Dühr, London: RTPI (Royal Town Planning Institute) and at
        www.rtpi.org.uk Greed, C. (2005) 'Overcoming the factors inhibiting the 
        mainstreaming of gender into spatial planning policy in the United 
        Kingdom' Urban Studies Vol.42, No.4, p1-31.Greed, C and Reeves,D (2005) 'Mainstreaming equality into strategic 
        spatial policy making: are town planners losing sight of gender? 
        Construction Management and Economics: Special Issue on 'Diversity and 
        Equality in Education', Vol.23, No.10, pp 1059-1070.De Graft-Johnson,A., Manley,S and Greed.C (2005) 'Diversity or the 
        lack of it in the architectural profession', Construction Management and 
        Economics: Special Issue on 'Diversity and Equality in Education', Vol. 
        23, No.10, pp 1035-1043.Monagham, Angela (2004) 'Property Sex Timebomb' Property Week 
        27.08.04, pp. 13-14, see 
        www.propertyweek.co.uk for various items related to women in 
        surveying and property.RIBA (2003) Why do women leave architecture? RIBA commissioned 
        study. and on RIBA web site, study by Ann De Graft-Johnson, Sandra 
        Manley and Clara Greed, University of the West of England, Bristol. Go 
        to www.riba.org.uk then chose 
        'gender'.RICS (2003) Raising the Ratio Investigation of composition of the 
        surveying profession Kingston,London: University of Kingston on Thames, 
        undertaken by Louise Ellman and Sarah Sayce), and see
        www.rics.org. and
        L.Ellison@kingston.ac.uk.Rose,N (2005) 'Growing pains' Law Society Gazette Vol 102, Issue 28, 
        pp 22-4. Sweet,Rod (2005) 'Redressing the balance: women in the construction 
        industry' Construction Manager July/August 2005, pp 12-14.Watts,J. (2003) Women in Civil Engineering: Continuity and Change, 
        Unpublished PhD thesis, (Enfield, London, Middlesex University).  By Clara Greed, Faculty of the Built Environment, University of the 
      West of England, Bristol, UK, 
      ClaraGreed@aol.com and 
      Clara.Greed@uwe.ac.uk  
 
        
          | Editor: Chair of the Joint Commission Working Group 
      on Under-represented Groups in Surveying Ms. Gabriele Dasse, 
      Kleinfeld 22 a, D-21149
      Hamburg, Germany
 E-mail: g.dasse@gmx.de
 1/06, month of issue:
      February © Copyright 2006 Gabriele Dasse. Permission is granted to photocopy in limited quantity for educational 
      purposes.
 Other requests to photocopy or otherwise reproduce material 
      in this newsletter should be addressed to the Editor.
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