Women in higher education leadership in Pakistan remain markedly underrepresented, particularly in the Sindh province, where patriarchal social structures, feudal cultural norms, and opaque institutional systems severely constrain their leadership trajectories. This qualitative study investigates how women in Sindh’s academic institutions construct their professional identities and navigate barriers to leadership in both urban and rural university contexts. Drawing on Feminist Theory, Social Identity Theory, and the Glass Ceiling and Sticky Floor metaphors, the research explores the lived experiences of women in mid-to-senior academic positions. In-depth narrative interviews reveal five interlocking challenges: gendered institutional cultures that delegitimize female authority, the absence of formal mentoring pathways, resistance from male subordinates, intersectional discrimination affecting women from minority and rural backgrounds, and persistent work-life imbalances unsupported by institutional policies. Despite systemic constraints, women faculty display resilience and agency through adaptive leadership styles, informal mentorship practices, and strategic navigation of institutional norms. Their narratives demonstrate a shift from hierarchical leadership models to relational and transformative practices grounded in empathy, inclusivity, and advocacy. The study contributes to the evolving discourse on gender and leadership in South Asian higher education by providing an empirically grounded, context-specific account of how women resist, reframe, and redefine professional identity under constraint. Policy recommendations include institutional reforms such as gender quotas, mentorship programs, leadership training hubs, and gender-sensitization initiatives. Ultimately, the study calls for a structural overhaul that reimagines academic leadership as an inclusive, participatory domain where women’s contributions are not only visible but institutionally valued.
Kaka et al. (Thu,) studied this question.