Very Interesting – July-August 2019

(Sean Pound) #1
PHOTOS: JOHNNY MILLAR, GETTY

DR JESS WADE


@jesswade


FIND OUT MORE


Here are some of the excellent resources
mentioned by our panel:
WOMEN’S ENGINEERING
SOCIETY
Supports and inspires women
in engineering and science.
wes.org.uk

HOUR OF CODE
One-hour coding activities to
encourage people of any ability to
get involved in computer science.
hourofcode.com

1752 GROUP
Research and lobby group
working to end sexual
misconduct in higher education.
1752group.com

LET TOYS BE TOYS
Campaign to stop toys being
promoted as only suitable for
girls or boys.
lettoysbetoys.org.uk

PHYSICIST AT IMPERIAL.

COLLEGE LONDON. IN 2018,.
SHE WON THE DAPHNE.

JACKSON PRIZE FROM THE.
INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS.

atmosphere, an
environment where
sometimes there’ll just be a
few people. You may be alone
with your supervisor quite
often, and there’s nothing you
can do about it. This person
will be older, you’ll generally
be very junior, and your entire
career can depend on them.
It’s no different from a
Hollywood casting room in
that sense. It’s an environment
ripe for abuse, really.
Jess There’s an Athena Swan
Award that UK universities
can compete for. It’s kind of a
gender equality kitemark. A
bunch of senior female

academics got together and
said, “We’re going to make an
award scheme where grant
money will depend on your
ability to get one of these
awards, and you’ll get bronze,
silver or gold depending on
your commitment to
improving the scientific
community for everyone
working there. For
undergraduates, postgrads,
professors, everyone.”
Whether you’re a woman, or a
person of colour, or an
LGBTQ+ scientist, all of these
add up, and this makes you
much more vulnerable to
these positions of power. We

go on and on about science’s
lack of women, but it’s because
they’re leaving. Whether it’s a
huge sexual harassment case,
or it’s something big that’s
happened, or it’s just these
constant knocks to you
because of your gender.
Suzie These things don’t

change overnight. And you
know, bringing in a policy now
is helpful. But we have to
recognise that it takes years of
work to change this kind of
thing. It doesn’t just change in
a heartbeat. 7

[email protected]

Women In Science


“We go on about science’s


lack of women, but it’s


because they’re leaving.”


Just before we interviewed Jess,
she’d launched a fundraising
campaign to get a copy of Angela
Saini’s Inferior into every secondary
school in the UK. In just 12 days
she achieved her goal.
Free download pdf