FEMALE librarians and women working with the disabled take a bow.
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Since 2001, you have received more Order of Australia honours than your male counterparts.
That’s 185 of you, compared with 145 men.
But of nearly 15,000 honours handed out across 14 years and 31 fields — from architecture to veterinary science — men were recognised at more than twice the rate of women, according to an analysis of awards within the Order of Australia’s general division.
Even among honours recognising contributions to the community, men received three awards to every two bestowed on women.
In two categories, surveying and mining, men received every one of 43 honours.
The overall split — 68 per cent male, 32 per cent female — was “disheartening”, said Federal Sex Discrimination Commissioner Elizabeth Broderick.
She said the disparity showed a “lack of visibility” for work done by women, who provided most of the nation’s unpaid caring work.
She also noted women frequently ran the nat-ion’s not-for-profit organisations. Yet they lacked equal recognition in the country’s highest awards.
“One of the messages it potentially sends is that women are not contributing at the same level as men in Australian society, and I disagree with that,” Ms Broderick said.
Author and social commentator Jane Caro described the situation as “sadly predictable” and said it adhered to “the 30 per cent rule”, alluding to similar ratios of women elsewhere in society, including in parliaments and the media.
The effect, she said, was to deem contributions by women as less valuable than those made by men.
“That’s a devastating thing to say to half the population,” she said.
“We approve of women when they do things for love. We are rather less likely to approve of them when they do things for money. For men, it is precisely the opposite.”
The chairman of the Council of the Order of Australia, retired Air Chief Marshal Angus Houston, insisted the council weighed each nomination on its merit, but said the council could only assess the nominations received, and two-thirds were for men.
Nominations come from the community and were reviewed by the council of 11 men and five women.
The council’s recommendations went to the Governor-General.
The honours are announced on Australia Day and the Queen’s Birthday holiday.