I get that. My point is that gynecocracy is about people in power, so I was thinking about those in power at the universities (deans and professors), not enrollment. If enrollment is higher, wouldn’t that have more to do with K-12 education (which is female dominated largely due to crappy pay, so won’t likely be a primary breadwinner)?
More women than men were joining universitites (in the US) for the last 40 years.
And yet many people still push for more female enrolment in universities. That’s the difference between feminism and equality.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/236360/undergraduate-enrollment-in-us-by-gender/
I get that. My point is that gynecocracy is about people in power, so I was thinking about those in power at the universities (deans and professors), not enrollment. If enrollment is higher, wouldn’t that have more to do with K-12 education (which is female dominated largely due to crappy pay, so won’t likely be a primary breadwinner)?