
Claire Murray challenged me by asking what I would do about gender bias in science
In February 2020, Irish chemist Claire Murray provoked me. She spoke clearly and passionately at one of the last professional meetings I went to that was unaffected by lockdowns and social distancing. It launched a book called âWomen in Their Elementâ, telling the often-overlooked stories of female scientists involved in filling in the periodic table of chemical elements. And it has changed how I work ever since.
In her talk Claire went beyond recapping her chapter, jointly written with Jess Wade, the pioneering activist on gender bias in science, on discoverers of the superheavy elements at the bottom of the periodic table. She also revealed the biases that have prevented women from being as successful in science as they should be. These include sexism, harassment, and stereotypes that women shouldnât be scientists. Altogether this leads to a âleaky pipelineâ, where fewer female scientists progress to more senior levels than male ones. Similar leaky pipeline issues also face Black, Asian and other ethnic minority scientists.
âWe have allowed science to be the lone male white genius for too long,â Claire said. She ended by challenging us. âWhat can we do?â she asked. âHow can we measure change? Who is responsible?â and finally, âWhat are you going to do?â When Claire signed my copy of the book, she repeated that provocation. âWhat are you going to do?â, she wrote. Read the rest of this entry »