Metadata
Title
Social and gender competence
Category
general
UUID
3bcbcf4fa359476b818a603ee87671a9
Source URL
https://www.tuwien.at/en/tu-wien/a-university-for-all/committee-on-equal-treatme...
Parent URL
https://www.tuwien.at/en/tu-wien/a-university-for-all/committee-on-equal-treatme...
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T18:14:36+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Social and gender competence

Source: https://www.tuwien.at/en/tu-wien/a-university-for-all/committee-on-equal-treatment/social-and-gender-competence Parent: https://www.tuwien.at/en/tu-wien/a-university-for-all/committee-on-equal-treatment

Overview: Social and gender competence

As a core competency group, social and gender competence has been one of the essential criteria for some years at TU Wien in appointment procedures and other admission processes for managerial roles (see questionnaire). Both groups of skills are also of paramount importance as a code of conduct, and in reflexivity and knowledge, in everyday work at the university, for constructive interaction in research, administration and teaching practice and to coordinate the respective professional strategies accordingly.

Gender mainstreaming, which has long since been a key term for the universal view of gender relevance in all aspects [cf. 4R method] could likewise be understood and practised as social mainstreaming as regards the universal view of person-related, diversity-aware and anti-discriminatory matters. Since talk of gender and social competence is all too often limited to either knowledge or behaviour, an understanding of gender and social competence as an area of intersectionality would be helpful.

Questions that arise in discussing this matter include the following: