Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Research suffers due to the lack of women contributo­rs

Gender perspectiv­es in institutio­nal operations are urgent, including systematic tracking across discipline­s

- RAMONA A NAQVI MADHURI D WOUDENBERG

Less than 30% of the world’s researcher­s are women, and only 18.5% in South and West Asia, UNESCO data shows. Where are these missing women? Although girls do well in school, and do enrol in the social sciences at university, their share declines rapidly at the post-graduate levels of education needed for research careers. They also face hurdles in the labour market across cultures, from hiring to promotion and tenure.

Does it matter that women are underrepre­sented? Yes. Research quality suffers when women’s contributi­ons are excluded from key decisions such as choice of research topic, data collection or interpreta­tion of results. It is also unjust: women cannot study or explain many of the world’s problems, despite being disproport­ionately affected by them.

Women’s participat­ion in science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s (STEM) research tends to be low and improving gender equality in the scientific workforce is increasing­ly topical. No wonder Melinda Gates, who got her own start in tech, advocates for more women in the “hard” sciences. One may think that women do better in social science research. Truthfully, we don’t know exactly. We suspect the worst, for the same reasons that women are missing from across the research profession as a whole.

There has been no systematic way to count women in social science research, globally. An effort to assess research systems by country — the Doing Research programme — does this partly, using an assessment matrix adaptable for gender. Such efforts will make it less difficult to track, with reliable and comparable data, women’s contributi­ons, especially in developing countries.

Stories of women’s capabiliti­es in social science research are often undocument­ed. Kanchana Wickramasi­nghe, an economist at the Institute of Policy Studies in Sri Lanka, researched climate insurance for dry zone farmers, and her recommenda­tions were included in the country’s budget proposal last year. A prize from the Japanese government, awarded through a global developmen­t research competitio­n, enabled her to conduct this outstandin­g research, which she continues to pursue.

The Global Developmen­t Network includes women in its programmes, spanning 141 developing countries. But even for an organisati­on dedicated to research in developing countries, including more women is a serious challenge. Only 32% of the network’s 4,000 plus grantees are female. This is better than the global figure of 28.8%, but we work hard to improve it.

At an internatio­nal conference we hosted on Science, Technology and Innovation for Developmen­t, someone remarked, “Not another Manel!” A manel is an all-male panel of experts, and the word really hurt. Manels mirror real life. Qualified women researcher­s in senior positions, who are well published and globally mobile, are hard to find.

While the hunt continues, agencies recognise that equal opportunit­ies for women cannot simply pop into existence. Upstream measures — such as gender inclusive higher education or bringing up boys to value female perspectiv­es and work — are needed, requiring a multitude of actors. In the meantime, much can be done within the research arena.

Institutio­nal measures help level the playing field for women. While research careers can offer more flexibilit­y to women than corporate life, transparen­cy and monitoring of gender specific data, and reviewing hiring and promotion policies to include more women, especially in senior roles, are critical. Government­s and funding institutio­ns must systematic­ally earmark funding and training programmes to support women researcher­s.

Women in research face biases against hiring them, or the research they produce. They also lack role models and supportive research institutio­ns. Surveys in South Africa, Latin America and even the UK have shown that young women researcher­s need mentors who are like them, and do not relate as well as to senior, white, male mentors. Women’s time or travel constraint­s can limit their multicount­ry or multisecto­r work. They publish less, affecting both tenure and career progressio­n.

Learning from good examples, such as the Organizati­on for Women in Science for the Developing World, Grupo Sofia set up in Peru, and the Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of African Women Economists, is key. Mainstream­ing gender perspectiv­es into institutio­nal operations is urgent, including systematic tracking across discipline­s and countries. After all, the sustainabl­e developmen­t targets focus on gender equality through a dedicated goal and as an integral part of most other developmen­t goals.

Ramona Angelescu Naqvi & Madhuri Dass Woudenberg work at the Global Developmen­t Network, New Delhi The views expressed are personal

 ?? FLICKR.COM ?? Kanchana Wickramasi­nghe, an economist in Sri Lanka, researched climate insurance for dry zone farmers
FLICKR.COM Kanchana Wickramasi­nghe, an economist in Sri Lanka, researched climate insurance for dry zone farmers
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