When looking at gender demographics in the academic career progression, from student to professor, there is a far greater loss of women compared to men. This is known as the leaky pipeline, and it is a well-acknowledged gender equality problem world-wide. In Switzerland, 48% of the PhD students are women, but only 20% are full professors [1]. The STEM fields (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) show a particularly low proportion of women relative to men [2,3]. These scientific areas are therefore more likely to be harsh-working environments for women. While several studies have addressed the leaky pipeline in Switzerland, none have collected data from the researchers who themselves left academia.
The UPSTEM project aims to better understand the reasons behind the leaky pipeline in Switzerland’ STEM fields by surveying the researchers who left academia.
References
[1] Data from the European Tertiary Education Register (ETER, 2020).
[2] Zimmermann, O. et al. (2023). Gender equality measures in academia. Swiss Science National Foundation.
[3] Blickenstaff, C. J. (2005). Gender and Education, 17(4), 369–386.
Pamela Delgado
Marco Cavallaro
Robbie I'Anson Price