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Patchy Progress on Fixing Global Gender Disparities in Science

Patchy Progress on Fixing Global Gender Disparities in Science

by The Daily Eye Team March 14 2017, 2:47 pm Estimated Reading Time: 0 mins, 39 secs

Although women are publishing more studies, being cited more often, and securing more coveted first-author positions than they were in the mid 1990s, overall progress towards gender parity in science varies widely by country and field. This is according to a massive report released on March 8 that is the first to examine such a broad swath of disciplines and regions of the world over time. The report by the publisher Elsevier found that despite their moderate advances, women still published fewer articles than men, and were much less likely to be listed as first or last authors on a paper. Citation rates, however, were roughly equal: although female authors were cited slightly less than male authors, work authored by women was downloaded at slightly higher rates

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