Policies that effectively preclude women from pursuing particular
courses of study and professions are evidently neither rational nor
scientific. Yet, gender discrepancies are most stark in the science
disciplines, hindering women’s participation in the science and
technology industry around the world, according to the International
Labour Organisation. Women graduates are discriminated against in
research openings in the United States, as per a Yale University study.
In 2005, Harvard University president Lawrence Summers, a top-ranking
economist and treasury secretary in the Clinton administration, provoked
a furore with his highly sexist remarks. He argued that men
outperformed women in science and maths due to biological differences
and discrimination was not a barrier. That Mr. Summers’s successor was a
woman of eminence, or that other Ivy League institutions have females
at the helm, by itself does not negate pervasive stereotypes. According
to the ILO, the Iranian government has recently barred women from
careers in nuclear physics and electrical engineering. Chinese
institutions expect women to obtain higher entry grades for science
courses than their male counterparts. Moreover, women in the
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development region obtain more
than half of all university degrees but their share of qualifications
in science and technology is a mere 30 per cent. Clearly, it is wrong to
presume an automatic connection between an open, democratic society and
the realisation of equality of opportunities.
In India, the female-to-male student ratio in most scientific
disciplines has been rising but women are still grossly
under-represented in major scientific establishments in the public
sector, not to speak of the upper echelons of science administration and
management. This systemic failure to ensure the presence of women has a
cascading effect throughout the S&T ecosystem and serves as a major
disincentive for the thousands of capable women who wish to make a
career in science. The total number of women scientists to win the
prestigious Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar award has barely crossed
double-digits after five decades. The landmark 2004 Indian National
Science Academy study, Science Career for Indian Women, found
that while most women scientists did not find it difficult to find a
job, “many complained of gender-insensitive organisational practices and
workplace discrimination, which came in way of their career growth”.
Many also complained of gender-related nepotism and even sexual
harassment. One decade later, anecdotal evidence suggests the situation
is not much better.
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