Latin America's female scientists pack a big punch despite glass ceiling
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[May 14, 2021]
By Lucila Sigal
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Latin America's
female scientists and researchers are packing a big punch despite a
hard-to-break glass ceiling for top roles in academia and business,
reflecting how women are on the march in a region often seen as a
bastion of macho male culture.
A report by UNESCO and UN Women shows they account for 45% of female
researchers in Latin America and the Caribbean, compared with around 29%
globally, the highest anywhere in the world, although there are still
gaps in some specialties.
"Women are advancing in careers that were previously very masculine or
totally male-dominated," Gloria Bonder, director of the UNESCO Regional
Chair for Women, Science and Technology in Latin America, told Reuters
by telephone.
Latin America's women are soaring in the social and medical sciences,
though they are less represented in some of the so-called STEM subjects:
science, technology, engineering and mathematics, considered key areas
of future development.
"In mathematics we are almost half, in physics there are more men, but
in biology there is a predominance of women," said Bonder. "Today women
are aware and are in the fight to reverse these inequalities."
Obstacles, however, remain.
While more Latin American women graduate than men and there is almost
parity of researchers, women account for only 18% of deans at public
universities, and in the corporate sector, women account for just 27% of
executives.
"This is an important issue because, in general, companies have higher
salaries and offer other possibilities for professional development,"
Bonder said.
Many governments, universities and research institutes in the region
have implemented programs in recent years to promote gender equality and
prevent discrimination. But many women still face obstacles to advance
in scientific careers.
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Silvina Sonzogni (R), researcher member of the CONICET (National
Scientific and Technical Research Council), works next to student
Eliana Rozowykwiat, at the laboratory of Neurogenetics of the
University Buenos Aires, in Buenos Aires, Argentina May 13, 2021.
REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian
The COVID-19 pandemic, which has put a spotlight on
the importance of scientific endeavor, has also sharpened challenges
for women, including the complex juggling act of succeeding at work
while often doing more childcare than male counterparts.
"I think that there's a glass ceiling created by motherhood and
childcare tasks," said Silvina Sonzogni, 38, a graduate in genetics
with a doctorate in biological chemistry at the University of
Buenos Aires.
"The pandemic made it fully visible because we were all at home. A
lot is being done to bridge that gap."
Experts say that more public policies, business incentives and
changes in the education system are needed.
"We have to adapt the paths and opportunities we give to girls and
women in their various spheres and in particular science, technology
and innovation," said Lidia Brito, director of UNESCO Sciences for
Latin America and the Caribbean.
"I am hopeful that we will continue to see the growth of women in
sciences. This pandemic showed that we must have more scientists and
excluding 50% of the population capable of being scientists is a
problem," she said.
(Reporting by Lucila Sigal; Editing by Adam Jourdan and Dan Grebler)
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