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Network on Ethnicity and Women Scientist

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Title: Network on Ethnicity and Women Scientist


1
Network on Ethnicity and Women Scientist
Funded by EU FP6 Framework
  • European Workshop on Gender and Diversity
  • Brussels, 11th 12th October 2007

2
European synthesis report
  • Black, migrants and ethnic minority women
    scientists in research and academic careers in
    seven European countries
  • Brussels, 11th October 2007
  • Nouria Ouali
  • Coordinator of the NEWS project

3
Migrant women scientists
  • First female university professors were migrant
    women
  • Sofia V. Kovalevskaja was the first professor of
    mathematics at the University of Stockholm in
    1884
  • Marya Salomea Sklodowska (Marie Curie) was the
    first professor of physics at the Sorbonne in
    Paris in 1906

4
Marie Curie
  • Marie Curie was in France
  • the first women to obtain a doctorate,
  • the first female university professor,
  • the first female Nobel Prize winner,
  • the first woman to win it twice,
  • the first woman to sit on the Academy of Science,
  • the first women accepted at the Academy of
    Medicine in 1922,
  • the first woman to enter the Pantheon in 1995

5
1. NEWS Project
  • Launched in January 2006 the NEWS project aims
  • -to produce a state of the art on the position of
    Black, migrant and ethnic minority (BME) women
    scientists in research and academic careers in
    seven EU countries
  • - to set up a European network for this group

6
2. The NEWS partners
  • Interdisciplinary research group Gender and
    Migration, Free University of Brussels (Belgium)
  • Institute for Psychology RWH, Aachen University
    (Germany)
  • Centre of European Refugees, Migration and
    Ethnic Studies, New Bulgarian University
    (Bulgaria)
  • Department of Work and Industrial Relations,
    University of Bari (Italy)
  • Centre of Expertise on Gender, Ethnicity and
    Multiculturality, Utrecht University (The
    Netherlands)
  • Institute of Social Sciences, University of
    Minho (Portugal)
  • Policy Studies Institute, University of
    Westminster (UK)

7
3. Main research questions
  • To what extent do minority women scientists
    participate in the existing national research
    workforce and what potential do they represent
    for the future development of this workforce?
  • Is gender and ethnic diversity considered a
    crucial element in increasing the national
    research workforce and improving the quality of
    European science?
  • Are there specific policies or programmes
    designed and implemented to promote the
    participation in science of women scientists and
    those from ethnic minorities?

8
4. Methodology
  • Collection of a range of data following a
    guideline
  • Concepts and terminology
  • National background
  • Database and statistics
  • Studies on minority women scientist careers
  • Formal and informal recruitment procedures
  • Good or bad practice in recruitment, promotion
    and recognition
  • Existing women scientists networks
  • Recommendation

9
5. Women targeted
  • All sciences
  • Public sector
  • Black, migrants and ethnic minority women
    (including national minorities)

10
6. Concepts and terminology
  • Migratory and colonial history, integration and
    naturalisation policy etc. produced
  • heterogeneous population (nationality,
    generation, citizenship, legal status etc.)
  • different criteria to categorize them
  • Legal (nationality, status, residence permit)
  • Race-ethnicity (Roma, Sinti, Berber, Kurd,
    Sorb,)
  • Skin colour (Black, White)
  • Economic status (Developed-non developed
    countries)
  • Geographic origin (Asian, African, Western,
    non-Western)

11
6.1. Concepts and terminology
  • Foreigners
  • Refugees
  • Allochtonen
  • Ausländer
  • Gastarbeiter
  • Migrants
  • Second, third generations
  • Ethnic minorities
  • Blacks
  • Asians
  • Turks
  • Moroccans etc.

12
6.2. Concepts and terminology
  • Make difficult comparisons
  • Reflect the social construction of these
    categories and concepts
  • The aim to establish hierarchy between human
    beings

13
7. New migration flows
  • More feminized
  • More qualified
  • More students mobility
  • OECD countries 75 are international students
  • Increasing by more than 40 since 2000
  • Over 50 in Southern Europe and the Netherlands

14
8.1. Level of education
  • Tertiary education increased in all countries
  • Men and women who have been settled for less
    than 10 years count proportionally more tertiary
    educated than native born and long-term migrants
    (gt10 years apart from the UK)
  • Ethnic minorities (second and third generation,
    Roma) remain under-qualified compare to new
    migrants and natives-born

15
8.2. Level of education
16
9.1. Labour market position
17
9.2. Over qualification
  • In all OECD countries, immigrants are more
    over-qualified than natives
  • Female recent migrants are most likely to be over
    qualified than
  • foreign-born men in Belgium, Germany and Italy
  • Natives women in the six countries

18
10. Women tertiary students
  • 55 of tertiary students in 2003 in the EU-25
    were women (Eurostat 2006)
  • More women than men studied humanities and arts
    in the six countries
  • In Italy and Portugal almost 50 of sciences,
    math and computing were women

19
11. Women PhD graduates
  • In 2003 43 of PhDs in the EU-25 were women (5
    compare to 1999)
  • The countries where the share of women PhD is the
    highest are
  • Portugal 56 58 in Math and computing
  • Bulgaria 52 54 in Math and computing
  • Italy 51 53 in Math and computing

20
12. Female Researchers
  • The lowest proportion of female researchers in
    EU-25 is in engineering and technology in HES
    (21) and GOV (22) sectors
  • Portugal respectively 29 and 37
  • The highest proportion of women researchers in
    EU-25 is in GOV sector
  • Humanities 50 (66 in Bulgaria)
  • Medical Sciences 50 (59 in Portugal)

21
13. Academic Staff
  • Female staff according to the grade
  • Greater presence of women at the lowest grade in
    the EU-25 (Grade D no requiring PhD) 43
    (Portugal 50)
  • Lower proportion at the grade A 15 (Bulgaria
    18 and Portugal 21)
  • Women are under-represented
  • in Engineering and Technology particularly in NL
    and Germany
  • In natural sciences (except in Portugal and
    Italy)

22
14. Minority women scientists
  • No visibility of female migrants in skilled
    migration
  • Female dominant figure unskilled domestic worker
  • No studies and rare publication on this group
  • No statistics or weakness data

23
15. Statistics
  • Most of countries have no statistics on ethnicity
    apart from the UK, the NL and Bulgaria (ethnic
    group and mother tongue)
  • No possible European comparison
  • OECD statistics on natives and foreign born

24
15. Ethnic categories
25
16. Minority students
  • More BME students achieved tertiary education
    than before
  • In the UK, BME are less represented at PhD level
    than in Master level except for Chinese and Black
    Africans and more oriented SET and Medicine
    (Masters)
  • In Bulgaria, Turkish minority pursued more often
    a university degree than Roma
  • In Italy, foreign women graduated perform better
    than Italian women in scientific faculties and
    lesser in Humanities

26
17. Minority women researchers
  • There are ample studies to show that, although
    access to university has widened to include
    previously excluded groups, the university
    environment is less supportive for women and
    ethnic minorities than for white men (Rowe, 1977
    Blakemore et al. 1997). (White) women are more
    likely to occupy temporary or part time positions
    and they are clustered in the lowest faculty
    ranks. The representation of ethnic minorities
    among faculty is close to zero, but statistics
    revealing exact numbers are scanty. This holds
    true not only for the Netherlands but for Europe
    in general. (Philomena Essed, 1999)

27
Studies in the Netherlands
  • 1986 Abell Menara
  • Position of ethnic minorities (male and females)
    employed by the university of Amsterdam
  • 1999 Bosc, Hoving Wekker
  • Situation of female academics and minority groups
    within Dutch universities
  • 2002 Kleurrijk Talent
  • Situation of ethnic minorities staff in 5
    universities
  • 2002 National scientific research
  • Investigation on the possible reason for the
    under-representation of BME academics in Dutch
    universities

28
18. Disadvantaged positions
  • These studies led to the same conclusions
  • low influx of BME students and female PhDs
  • BME under-represented in the university staff
  • 1.6 in Amsterdam (14 population)
  • BME under-represented in the academic staff (Full
    professor, Associate and Assistant professor)
  • BME women in academia represent less then 1 of
    the Dutch female staff

29
18. Disadvantaged positions
  • Professorship appointment of BME are recent
    creation of special and exterior chairs
  • Permanent position are more often hold by
    natives Dutch
  • Over-represented in technical and administrative
    positions

30
19. Academic grade structure by ethnicity in UK
31
20. Contract term in Germany
32
21. Contract term in Belgium
33
22. Gender impact in Italy
  • In Italy, the disadvantageous positions of
    Italians women and foreign women are quite
    similar.
  • 44 of female foreign academics in Italian
    universities came from EU countries
  • 21 from America
  • 9 from Africa

34
23. Gender impact Italy
35
24. Chances of promotion
  • Chances for women and BME scientists of being
    promoted full professor are lower than for men
  • In Belgium a men has
  • 4 times more chance in Medicine
  • 2 times more chance in Science
  • 1.6 times more chance in Social Sciences

36
25. Early stages of careers
  • In the UK a study showed that it is in the early
    stages of careers that foundation of success and
    social mobility are constructed
  • Self-confidence
  • Informal networks
  • Judgement of capabilities by senior
  • related patronage
  • racial and gender stereotypes

37
26. Institutional practices
  • Formal legal rules
  • prerequisite conditions (nationality, Doctorate,
    age, language, work permit)
  • public competition (Italy, Bulgaria, Portugal)
  • application in selection committee (Belgium,
    Netherlands, Germany, UK)
  • peer review (publications, conferences, teaching
    charges and qualities, team management ability,
    academic responsibilities, academic seniority,
    stays abroad, networks, presence in the medias
    etc.)

38
27. Institutional practices
  • Informal
  • Gender
  • Age
  • Race, ethnicity
  • Stereotypes
  • Social network
  • Philosophical/political or religious beliefs
  • The absence of monitoring and evaluation in the
    countries (except UK) of recruitment, promotion,
    appointment procedures allowed to informal
    decisions

39
28. Race Equality in Education
  • The race equality duty requires educational
    institutions to
  • Prepare a written statement of their policy for
    promoting race equality
  • Maintain a copy of the statement
  • Assess the impact of their policies, including
    their race equality policy, on students and staff
    of different racial groups including, in
    particular, the impact on attainment levels of
    such pupils
  • Monitor, by reference to those racial groups, the
    admission and progress of students and the
    recruitment and career progress of staff
  • Have in place arrangements for fulfilling, as
    soon as is reasonably practicable, their duties.
  • Include in their written statement an indication
    of their arrangements for publishing that
    statement and the results of their assessment and
    monitoring
  • Take such steps as are reasonably practicable to
    publish annually the results of their monitoring
    under this article

40
29. Policies for students
  • The Netherlands
  • MOSAIEK graduates into research
  • ECHO award talented students
  • Bulgaria
  • Framework programme for Equal Integration of Roma

41
30. Policies for recruitment and promotion
  • The UK
  • Actions to increase and improve participation
    women in science, engineering and technology
    (SET) Athena project
  • 2006 conference on Gender and Ethnic minority
    issues in science and Technology in New Castle
  • The Netherlands
  • ASPASIA improving the situation of female
    academics

42
31. Recommendations
  • Need to change culture and attitude
  • Tackling gender and race stereotypes
  • Statistics
  • Research
  • Educational policies
  • how supporting and increasing PhD female students

43
31. Recommendations
  • Employment policies
  • transparency in procedures, Equality and
    Diversity management
  • Networking
  • Universities role in producing
  • knowledge on relevant issues on gender and
    ethnicity
  • Multiculturality
  • Tackling racism as a problem for institutions not
    just for ethnic minorities staff and students

44
7. Recommendations
  • Dissemination strategy
  • Institutional strategy
  • Needs of women scientists

45
7.1. Dissemination strategy
  • For increasing public awareness and institutional
    support the NEWS results must be widely
    disseminated
  • -What products in what presentation?
  • -What audience and institutions must be
    targeted?
  • -How to contact public and institution?
  • -Who must be contacted?

46
7.2. Institutional strategy
  • -How to ensure that HES and research
    institutions take into account gender and ethnic
    diversity in student grants, recruitment,
    promotion and recognition procedures?
  • -How minority women can participate in Equal
    opportunity commission to ensure that gender and
    ethnic diversity is taken into account?
  • -How to provide support to help women scientists
    to get a better position at HE and RD
    organizations?
  • -What could networks and professional
    organisations make to give support to minority
    women scientists?

47
7.3. Needs of minority women scientists
  • -What need minority women scientists to improve
    their position in HES and research?
  • -How empower these women scientists through
    networking?
  • -What they could expect from the networks?
  • -What they should give to be more integrated in
    scientific community?

48
European University Association
Diversity in terms of e.g. talents, interests,
previous qualifications, experience and social
backgrounds was identified as a crucial factor
for fostering creativity on a number of levels
composition of research teams, among students and
staff, teaching and learning methods, joint
projects with external partners etc. Both
research and teaching teams may profit from a
diversity of disciplinary foci among its
members. EUA (2007) Creativity in Higher
Education, Report on the EUA creativity project
2006-2007.
49
NEWS project
Thank you for your attention http//newscientis
t.ulb.ac.be/index_en.htm
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