Women in Diocesan Leadership Positions:
A Progress Report
(The following is an edited version of a report prepared by William Daly, National Association of Church Personnel Administrators, at the request of the Committee on Women in Society and in the Church, National Conference of Catholic Bishops. For a complete copy please e-mail: women@usccb.org)
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In From Words to Deeds, its most recent statement on the role of women in the church, the US Bishops' Committee on Women in Society and the Church established three goals for promoting an increased appreciation of women in church life. The second goal focuses on the appointment of women to church leadership positions. The Bishops' Committee also suggested that progress on this second goal be tracked and evaluated.
In light of these initiatives, the Bishops' Committee asked the National Association of Church Personnel Administrators (NACPA) to share information it has gathered concerning the employment of women in positions of leadership in dioceses and archdioceses. Since 1990, NACPA has annually compiled data on the gender of persons in diocesan administrative and professional positions. This data is gathered as part of a survey of salaries paid to diocesan staff members.
The survey statistics for the 1995 through 1998 period are interesting. They show women holding approximately one-quarter of top diocesan positions, 40% to 50% of middle management positions and 60% of non-supervisory professional positions in the 50% of US Catholic dioceses that participated in the survey. The position levels are defined fully in Exhibit 2 but can be briefly sketched with Level 1 corresponding to top positions, Levels 2 and 3 to middle management positions, and Level 4 to nonsupervisory professional positions.
Some growth appears to have occurred at most levels in most of the years reviewed. Overall, small but steady growth in women's employment transpired in the participating dioceses, judging from the summary for all positions.