Foredrag og samtaler

Who Enters, Who Stays, Who Leaves: Gender, Family, and Merit in Algerian Elite Institutions


Seréna Nilsson Rabia, stipendiat ved Institutt for Politikk og Forvaltning, presenterer en artikkel hvor Ragnhild Muriaas er medforfatter.

Seréna Nilsson Rabia er stipendiat ved SUCCESS-prosjektet ved Institutt for Politikk og Forvaltning. I denne presentasjonen, vil hun med utgangapunkt i etnografisk feltarbeid og intervju med kvinner i flere yrker, undersøke hvordan karriereløp formes av diverse overlappende forventninger, i presentasjonen "Who Enters, Who Stays, Who Leaves: Gender, Family, and Merit in Algerian Elite Institutions".

Presentasjonen blir på engelsk. En lett lunsj blir servert, etter førstemann til mølla-prinsippet.

Arrangementet er hybrid, så om du ikke kan komme kan du delta digitalt. (ekstern lenke).

Velkommen!

Engelsk sammendrag

The recent removal of Algeria’s gender quota has reignited debates about merit, family responsibilities, and women’s participation in elite institutions. However, the question is not only who can enter these spaces, but who can remain and advance within them. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork and interviews with women working in politics, healthcare, education, and law, this paper examines how professional trajectories are shaped by overlapping expectations of domestic care, religious norms, and institutional practices. Many women report limiting or leaving their careers in order to balance work and family responsibilities, while some unmarried women anticipate withdrawing from the workforce after marriage, citing both religious obligations and social expectations. At the same time, domestic roles are framed as requiring education and competence, highlighting a paradox in which merit is simultaneously expected and restricted. Using a postcolonial feminist perspective, I argue that merit functions within a neopatriarchal system influenced by colonial legacies and authoritarian governance. In this system, institutional inclusion does not automatically translate into real opportunities for women. By examining both entry and retention in professional spaces, this study shows how gendered norms and structural inequalities shape the limits of merit, revealing the ongoing tension between policy reforms, societal expectations, and women’s agency in Algeria.