‘Gender shouldn’t matter because we are all scientists here’ : a narration of the panel discussion at the 2nd International Women in Science Without Borders conference

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Authors

Van Staden, Antoinique
Ahmed, Nova
Getachew, Yoseph
Gledhill, Irvy M.A.
Kanjere, Maria
Khuluse-Makhanya, Sibusisiwe
Das, Sonali

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Academy of Science of South Africa

Abstract

The disparities that exist between men and women, and more so working mothers, in the participation of science, technology, engineering, mathematics, medicine and innovation (STEMMI) are a global concern.2 In the past, efforts to address gender inequalities in STEMMI progressed at a slower pace because of the fragmented nature of gender equality advocacy efforts. In explicitly defining gender equality as a goal for sustainable development (SDG 5), there is renewed vigour in the pursuit of solutions to address discrimination on the basis of gender.3 Challenges that constrain women’s full participation in political, economic and public life are being identified, and as a result policies and strategies, including those concerning women in STEMMI in developing countries like South Africa, are being reviewed to ensure that the gender gap is reduced.

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Keywords

Cultural perceptions, Parental bias, Gender wage gap, Science, technology, engineering, mathematics, medicine and innovation (STEMMI)

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Van Staden A, Ahmed N, Getachew Y, Gledhill IMA, Kanjere M, Khuluse-Makhanya S, et al. ‘Gender shouldn’t matter because we are all scientists here’: A narration of the panel discussion at the 2nd International Women in Science Without Borders conference. S Afr J Sci. 2019;115(3/4), Art. #5865, 4 pages. https://DOI.org/10.17159/sajs.2019/5865.