Unravelling the gender productivity gap in science: a meta-analytical review

Author:

Astegiano Julia12ORCID,Sebastián-González Esther13ORCID,Castanho Camila de Toledo14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Ecologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo, Rua do Matão 321, trav14, 05508-090 São Paulo, Brazil

2. Grupo de Interacciones Ecológicas y Conservación, Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Vegetal (IMBIV), Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, CC 495, X5000ZAA Córdoba, Argentina

3. Departamento de Biología Aplicada, Universidad Miguel Hernández, Avda. Universidad s/n, 03202 Elche, Spain

4. Departamento de Ciências Ambientais, Universidade Federal de São Paulo—UNIFESP, Rua São Nicolau 210, 09913-030 Diadema, Brazil

Abstract

Women underrepresentation in science has frequently been associated with women being less productive than men (i.e. the gender productivity gap), which may be explained by women having lower success rates, producing science of lower impact and/or suffering gender bias. By performing global meta-analyses, we show that there is a gender productivity gap mostly supported by a larger scientific production ascribed to men. However, women and men show similar success rates when the researchers' work is directly evaluated (i.e. publishing articles). Men's success rate is higher only in productivity proxies involving peer recognition (e.g. evaluation committees, academic positions). Men's articles showed a tendency to have higher global impact but only if studies include self-citations. We detected gender bias against women in research fields where women are underrepresented (i.e. those different from Psychology). Historical numerical unbalance, socio-psychological aspects and cultural factors may influence differences in success rate, science impact and gender bias. Thus, the maintenance of a women-unfriendly academic and non-academic environment may perpetuate the gender productivity gap. New policies to build a more egalitarian and heterogeneous scientific community and society are needed to close the gender gap in science.

Funder

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference47 articles.

1. United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization. 2015 UNESCO Global Science Report: Towards 2030 . See http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0023/002354/235406e.pdf%5Cnhttp://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0023/002354/235407e.pdf.

2. The academic jungle: ecosystem modelling reveals why women are driven out of research

3. Leaks in the pipeline: separating demographic inertia from ongoing gender differences in academia

4. Understanding current causes of women's underrepresentation in science

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