Female researchers do marginally better than their male peers in marshalling successful funding bids, a study has found, but seniority is so skewed that men monopolise grants in almost every field.
An analysis of almost 47,000 grants awarded over 20 years by Australiaās two main research funding bodies has found that almost three-quarters of the money ā about A$19 billion (Ā£10 billion) of the A$26 billion distributed ā went to teams led by men. But this was not because of bias at the individual level, with women enjoying similar or slightly higher success rates in their funding applications.
Rather, it was because women had lodged far fewer of the 180,000 grant applications analysed, with the gap particularly pronounced at professorial level ā where success rates are highest. Men lodged 78 per cent of professor-led applications over the two decades, and won 76 per cent of the more than A$11 billion awarded to professors.
Campus resource: How to encourage gender equity in interdisciplinary researchĀ
The UNSW Sydney study has beenĀ Ā on the Open Science online platform. āThere are fewer women researchers in the workforce,ā said lead author Isabelle Kingsley. āThatās what we need to address. [It] means fewer women applying for grants, which in turn leads to fewer women receiving grants.ā
51³Ō¹Ļ
She said the disparity was particularly pronounced at senior levels. By 2020, 42 per cent of the funds awarded to ādoctoralā level researchers ā research associates, research fellows and senior research fellows ā went to women. At professorial level,Ā women attracted just 30 per cent of the grant money.
āThere is a seniority problem,ā Dr Kingsley said. āItās about retaining and progressing women in the research workforce.ā
51³Ō¹Ļ
The analysis found that womenās share of grant wins had improved significantly over the two decades, almost doubling at associate professor level and more than doubling among professors. But at the same time, overall success rates had roughly halved for everybody, with menās conversion rates falling particularly precipitously. āItās a harder game,ā Dr Kingsley acknowledged.
The paper calls for ābold, coordinated actionā to dismantle āentrenchedā workforce patterns. āOnly when the whole sector comes together to contribute solutions across the research ecosystem will we see genuine, sustainable progress towards gender equity,ā it says.
Options include imposing gender targets and making funding eligibility contingent on accreditation through schemes like the Athena Swan framework, the paper says. Research institutions have āsocial and legal responsibilitiesā to ensure that their staff have āequal opportunity to excelā, it insists, and governments and research funders can help strengthen āemployer accountabilityā by incentivising gender equity initiatives.
Gender targets attractĀ criticismĀ on both ideological and practical grounds. One argument is that senior male researchers may head abroad rather than accept lower odds of securing funds, depriving early career researchers ā including young women ā of the opportunity to boost their own citation rates by teaming up with highly regarded co-authors.
51³Ō¹Ļ
Dr Kingsley said there had been little research, so far, to determine whether fears of these types of unintended consequences were well founded.
āA lot of funding agencies areā¦trying different things right now and seeing what can be done to improve equity in the research workforce,ā she said. āPeople are trialling new things and seeing what happens.ā
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Õ±į·”ās university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?









