National Geographic USA - 11.2019

(Ron) #1

*INCLUDES SEXIST HOSTILITY, CRUDE BEHAVIOR, UNWANTED SEXUAL ATTENTION, AND SEXUAL COERCION
TAYLOR MAGGIACOMO AND KAYA BERNE, NGM STAFF. SOURCES: KEVIN M. SWARTOUT, GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY; NATIONAL ACADEMIES OF SCIENCES, ENGINEERING,
AND MEDICINE; INSTITUTE ON DOMESTIC VIOLENCE & SEXUAL ASSAULT, THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN; PEW RESEARCH CENTER; BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS


Computer programmers

Software developers

Statisticians

Computer network
architects

Environmental scientists

Chemists

Biologists

Medical scientists

Psychologists

Dental hygienists
Speech pathologists

Dietitians

Registered nurses

Vet assistants

Nurse practitioners

Pharmacists

Veterinarians
Physical therapists

EMTs

Chiropractors

Dentists

Physicians & surgeons

Optometrists

97.1%


Surveying and mapping
technicians

Mechanical engineers

Electrical engineers

Aerospace engineers

Civil engineers

Chemical engineers

Industrial engineers

Architects

3. 2%


HEALTH AVERAGE


SCIENCE AVERAGE


COMPUTER SCIENCE


AVERAGE


ENGINEERING AVERAGE


46.7%


72.6%


25.6%


15.9%


GENERAL WORKFORCE


47% AVERAGE


28.6% STEM AVERAGE


100%


0


Women who say: In workplaces with:

Science Engineering Medicine


1 in 5 1 in 4 1 in 2


An even mix or more women

More men than women78%

27%


21%


48%


48%


14%


33%


44%


They’ve experienced
discrimination

Their workplace has
a sexual harassment
problem

Gender made it harder
to succeed in their job

They’ve experienced
sexual harassment

SEXISM UNDER THE MICROSCOPE


Women, underrepresented in STEM (science, technology,
engineering, and math) and related fields, are exposed to
sexism throughout their education and careers.

In a University of Texas
survey, women reported
being sexually harassed*
by faculty and staff within
their field of study across
13 of its institutions.

Women make up a large
share of workers in health
fields (especially in jobs
requiring four years or
less of education) and a
smaller share in computer
science and engineering.

Women in scientific professions in workplaces with larger proportions
of male colleagues report more discrimination and harassment.

HARASSMENT
AT S C H O O L

U.S. WORKPLACE
R E P R E S E N TAT I O N

DISCRIMINATION AND HARASSMENT AT WORK

on sexual harassment accusations against prominent astronomer Geoff


Marcy, then at the University of California, Berkeley. Marcy was so noto-


rious that women there discouraged other women from working under


him. But it’s so hard for women to get misconduct claims addressed that


when he finally was investigated and sanctioned, Marcy was found to


have violated sexual harassment policies on campus for almost a decade.


Ghorayshi tells me that since writing about Marcy, she has been


approached by dozens more women—evidence of “how prevalent this


is at major institutions in the United States and elsewhere.” In many


of the cases she has reported on, Ghorayshi says, the women involved


have left the field: “It’s about vulnerability, and who is vulnerable and


who is untouchable.”


The bottom line, says physicist Chapman, is that universities need to


think more carefully about their commitment to equality. “We can talk


all day long about family-friendly policies, but we are in total denial


about the fact that there is an actively hostile culture,” she tells me. “I


think it is endemic.”


In the sciences today, there remains this implicit assumption that the


careers of young women are disposable while those of older men must


be protected at all costs, even if that means covering up unacceptable


behavior and putting more people in harm’s way. As long as we tolerate


this situation, there’s a steep price to pay.


The damage is not only to individuals, which is terrible enough. The


damage is also to science.j

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