
Gender Equity in Research: Need & Challenges
- India’s scientific ambitions face a gender equity crisis as women constitute only 43% faculty and remain underrepresented in STEM leadership.
Need for Gender Equity
- Talent Utilisation: Women constitute 43% faculty under AISHE 2021-22, yet remain underrepresented in STEM leadership positions nationally.
- Research Diversity: UNESCO estimates that women make up only one-third of global researchers, despite evidence linking diversity to higher innovation.
- Knowledge Economy: India’s $250 billion digital economy requires inclusive research ecosystems to strengthen global technological competitiveness and innovation capacity.
- SDG Achievement: Gender-equitable research advances SDG-4, SDG-5, and SDG-9 by promoting inclusive education, equality, and scientific innovation.
- Social Justice: Article 15(3) permits affirmative measures addressing persistent structural inequalities faced by women researchers in Indian academia.
Current Facts and Data
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Constitutional Provisions
- Article 14: Guarantees equality before law and equal protection of laws.
- Article 15(3): Permits special provisions for women and children.
- Article 16: Ensures equality of opportunity in public employment while allowing affirmative measures.
- Article 51A(e): Fundamental duty to renounce practices derogatory to women’s dignity.
Government Initiatives for Gender Equity in Research
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Major Challenges Faced by Women Researchers
- Caregiving Burden: TISS studies show women academics spend significantly higher hours on unpaid domestic and caregiving responsibilities than men.
- Career Interruptions: India’s 26-week maternity leave often disrupts publications, grants, collaborations, and promotion opportunities for women researchers.
- STEM Underrepresentation: UNESCO estimates women constitute only 33% global researchers, with lower representation in Indian engineering and technology institutions.
- Grant Disparities: SERB data indicate lower application and success rates among women in competitive scientific research funding programmes nationwide.
- Safety Concerns: Despite the POSH Act, 2013, many institutions lack effective ICCs, childcare facilities, and supportive workplace environments for women.
Strengthening Gender-Responsive Academia
- Re-entry Fellowships: DST’s Women Scientist Scheme supports researchers returning after career breaks, improving women’s academic continuity.
- Flexible Grants: SERB-style flexible timelines and grant extensions can reduce caregiving-related disruptions in women’s research careers.
- Childcare Support: IIT Bombay’s childcare facilities demonstrate how crèches improve women faculty participation and work-life balance.
- Caregiving Equity: Gender-neutral caregiving support can effectively complement women-specific academic protections for single parents and caregivers.
- Inclusive Campuses: NEP 2020 implementation can address the AISHE-reported 57:43 male-to-female imbalance in higher education institutions.
“Science knows no gender”; achieving SDG-4, SDG-5, and SDG-9 requires inclusive, equitable, and caregiving-sensitive institutions to strengthen India’s global scientific leadership.
Reference: The Hindu
PMF IAS Pathfinder for Mains – Question 684
Q. While India has made significant progress in women’s education, this transition has not translated proportionately into scientific leadership and research participation. Examine the reasons behind the underrepresentation of women in academia and STEM research, and suggest reforms for a gender-responsive research ecosystem. (250 Words) (15 Marks)
Approach
- Introduction: Write a contextual introduction about the women in research.
- Body: Write about women’s progress in education, highlight the reasons behind the underrepresentation of women in academia & STEM research, & suggest reforms for a gender-responsive research ecosystem.
- Conclusion: Emphasis on inclusive, caregiving-sensitive institutions for building a gender-responsive research ecosystem.















