Halkes Women + Faculty Network


The Halkes Women+ Faculty Network strives to make uu77 a more diverse, inclusive, and fair place. Although the network has a focus on gender equality and inclusion, it strives to think and work intersectionally, incorporating other facets of identity.

Go to:  Mission  •  Members •  About Catharina Halkes  •  Related networks  •    •    •    •  

Highlights

Winnaars RNVH Jubileumprijs

Winners of the RNVH Jubilee Prize 2025 announced

During the celebration of International Women's Day on Monday 10 March, four female scientists received the RNVH Jubilee Prize. The prize, which consists of a certificate and 1000 euros, was presented by Rector Magnificus José Sanders.

Mission

The work of the network focuses on four things:

  1. Facilitating contact between people, from PhD candidate to professor, at different faculties and from different disciplines, to help build professional networks, share experiences, and learn from each other.
  2. Empowering people by increasing their visibility and supporting their professional and personal development.
  3. Supporting people’s professional and personal development by providing them with information, connecting them to resources, and helping them develop their network.
  4. Building an inclusive and fair work environment at uu77 by advocating for and promoting fair policies, supportive facilities, and education and trainings on topics such as diversity and harassment.

Board members

The current board of the Halkes Women+ Faculty Network consists of academics from several faculties of uu77:

Contact Halkes

Do you have a question for the Halkes Women+ Faculty Network, would you like to subscribe to the newsletter, or are you interested in joining the network? Please feel free to contact halkes [at] ru.nl (halkes[at]ru[dot]nl) 

 

Catharina Halkes

Catharina Halkes

The Halkes Women+ Faculty Network is named after Catharina Halkes (1920-2011), the first professor of Women’s Studies at uu77, which was called Catholic University Nijmegen at the time. She became professor of Feminism and Christianity in 1983, when she was 62 years old, and retired three years later.  As a feminist and theologian, she was active in the women's movement within the Catholic church, addressing the role of women in the church as well as in larger society. She gained a measure of notoriety when, during her time as professor, she was forbidden to address Pope John Paul II when he visited the Netherlands in 1985. She is considered the founding mother of feminist theology in the Netherlands.

About 40 years since Professor Halkes’ professorship, only around 30% of professors at uu77 are women. This is an improvement, but it is still far from equality. We think this can and should be improved.

To honour the effort of Professor Halkes in advocating women’s rights at our university, our network was named after her: the Halkes Women Faculty Network.