Gender in the Portugal Research Arena: A Case Study in European Leadership
Elsevier’s latest global analysis reveals progress toward gender parity, but women still trail men in number of publications and citations.
Over the last two decades, Portugal has exhibited the largest percentage increase in women’s representation — an impressive 10% — putting the country at the leading edge of closing the gender gap in research.
Gender in the Portugal Research Arena: A Case Study in European Leadership 打開新的分頁/視窗 offers a data-led look at the dynamics underlying Portugal’s leading edge. At the same time, it points to persisting gender gaps in research that require stronger transformative efforts, and it reveals how these gaps tend to mimic and perpetuate structural inequalities between women and men.
Together with distinguished academic leaders in Portugal, we have worked to put into context quantitative analyses with policy perspectives, insights and best practices. We hope to contribute insights from the experience of one country to inform policy and inspire targeted initiatives among policymakers, research leaders and funders around the world to achieve gender equity in research.
Key findings
Women represent nearly 50% of active authors in Portugal — the closest to gender parity for all EU28 countries analyzed
Women are highly represented across the life sciences and health sciences fields, where gains in Portugal continue to be largest, and in chemistry, chemical engineering and psychology
They remain most underrepresented within the physical sciences, especially in fields related to data science and AI such as computer science, mathematics and engineering
In Portugal, women are most highly represented among first authors, indicative of greater gender representation for early-career researchers
Also, unlike the trend seen in other countries, women researchers are likely to continue publishing over time, thus remaining in research
Portugal’s leadership is the result of many deliberate steps, the result of specific policy initiatives and a coordinated approach to targeted interventions. Such efforts are combined with a longstanding commitment to strong early education STEM interventions and research on gender equality, as well as funding to implement work-life balance and gender equity plans.
Gender in the Portugal Research Arena: A Case Study in European Leadership
Download the report 打開新的分頁/視窗As Rosa Monteiro 打開新的分頁/視窗, Secretary of State for Citizenship and Equality, Portugal, states in the report:
The latest report gives us a positive picture of gender diversity progress in research. This seems to accompany women’s increased participation in the labor market. However, we also see that research reproduces structural gender inequality patterns. For example, having men with longer publication histories and established international networks is a reflection of career interruptions and the reality that women still shoulder a much larger share of unpaid care work than men over the life course, with gender gaps in terms of pay and vertical segregation.