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Don’t blame it on the pipeline: Gender disparity in invited commentaries and senior researchers

Research 2030

English - January 29, 2020 06:00 - 26 minutes - 18.1 MB - ★★★★★ - 11 ratings
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In this episode, we consider the sobering results of a recent study which shows that women researchers are around 20% less likely than men to author invited commentaries for scholarly journals – even when they have the same level of experience as their male peers. Incredibly, this figure rises to 40% for more senior female scientists. Join Anita de Waard as she explores the study with two of the authors, Emma Thomas and Bamini Jayabalasingham, in an attempt to explore some of the factors attributing to their findings and the impact the results have on the larger research landscape.

SHOW NOTES:
Invited commentaries are short articles that provide an author’s personal perspective or view points on a leading, significant or controversial topic. Typically the invited author is a leading expert in the subject matter and usually invited by the editor. “In medical journals, publication of an invited commentary is a recognition of expertise and can raise an author’s profile.” (Emma Thomas in Women scientists author fewer invited commentaries in medical journals than men with comparable credentials


Articles mentioned in the podcast:

Original study referenced in this episode: Gender Disparities in Invited Commentary Authorship in 2459 Medical Journals Referenced Holman et al article: The gender gap in science: How long until women are equally represented  

 Related articles and interesting reads:

I thought patriarchy in science was fading. Then I saw it in the dataWomen scientists author fewer invited commentaries in medical journals than men with comparable credentials We have a responsibility. Elsevier's Holly Falk-Krzesinski on gender equality in research

NOW AVAILABLE! The Elsevier Gender Report 2020
Gender disparity and bias in research, as explored in this podcast episode, negatively affect the breadth and impact of research, and the opportunities for researchers to advance in their careers. In order to understand this impact and overcome barriers, the global research community must closely examine the critical issues using an evidence-based approach.

Elsevier has an ongoing commitment to promoting gender diversity and advancing gender equity in global research. On March 5, 2020, we published The researcher journey through a gender lens: A global examination of research participation, career progression and perceptions. This is our third report on gender and research.

Download the report now here