[Wigsat-l] NUMBER OF RESEARCHERS RISING GLOBALLY BUT WOMEN STILL IN MINORITY – UN REPORT

Sophia Huyer shuyer at wigsat.org
Mon Nov 23 10:46:59 EST 2009


NUMBER OF RESEARCHERS RISING GLOBALLY BUT WOMEN STILL IN MINORITY – UN  
REPORT
New York, Nov 23 2009 10:05AM
Although the number of researchers working in developing countries  
over the last five years has increased by 50 per cent, women only  
occupy a very small percentage of these positions in some regions,  
according to a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural  
Organization (<"http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=29008&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html 
">UNESCO) report released today.

The UNESCO report, published by the agency’s Institute for Statistics  
(UIS), noted that between 2002 and 2007 almost 1 million new  
researchers were counted in developing countries, bringing the total  
number to 2.7 million and increasing its global share from around 30  
per cent to over 38 per cent.

Asia benefited from the largest rise in researchers, mainly due to  
China increasing its share from 14 to 20 per cent in five years.

“The increase in the number of researchers, notably in developing  
countries, is good news,” <"http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=46924&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html 
">said UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova.

“Although the participation of women in science, which UNESCO promotes  
notably through the L'Oréal-UNESCO Awards for Women in Science, is  
still too limited,” stressed Ms. Bokova.

According to the new UIS study, women represent less than 30 per cent  
of the researchers in the world, a figure that hides numerous regional  
disparities.

In Latin America ,46 per cent of researchers are women and gender  
parity has been achieved in Argentina, Cuba, Brazil, Paraguay and  
Venezuela, whereas in South Asia women only represent 18 per cent.

The report noted that in Europe only the former Yugoslav Republic of  
Macedonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Republic of Moldova and Serbia have  
achieved gender parity. In the Commonwealth of Independent States  
(CIS), women’s participation in research is 43 per cent, compared to  
33 per cent in Africa.

In addition, the report said that expenditure on research and  
development (R&D) is increasing, with rises in the percentage of gross  
domestic product (GDP) devoted to R&D in most countries, which now  
stands at 1.74 per cent on average around the world from 1.71 per cent  
in 2002.

The report also noted that in most developed countries, R&D is largely  
financed by the private sector – 60 per cent in North America and 50  
per cent in Europe – while in Latin America and the Caribbean it  
ranges from 25 to 50 per cent. In Africa, however, research is  
financed mostly by the public sector.

“Policy makers seem to realize more and more that innovation is key  
for economic growth, to the point of setting R&D investment targets,”  
said UNESCO Institute of Statistics Programme Specialist Martin  
Schaaper.

“China is the foremost example of a country setting a target – 2 per  
cent by 2010 and 2.5 per cent or more by 2020 – and being well on its  
way to reaching it,” said Mr. Schaaper, who is also one of the authors  
of the report. “Another example is given by the African Science and  
Technology Consolidated Plan of Action (CPA), which sets a target of 1  
per cent of GDP devoted to R&D.”
________________

For more details go to UN News Centre at http://www.un.org/news




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