International Women's Day 2013 - "The Gender Agenda:
Gaining Momentum"
"The story of women's struggle for equality belongs to no single feminist nor to any one
organisation, but to the collective efforts of all who care about
human rights" Gloria Steinem
International Women's Day
has been observed since the
early 1900's and is annually held on March 8 to celebrate women's
achievements throughout history and across nations. In 1977, the
United Nations (UN) proclaimed it
a "Day for Women's Rights and International Peace".
The 2013 theme is: 'The Gender Agenda: Gaining Momentum'.
Over time and distance, the equal rights of women
have progressed. The achievements of women are being celebrated
while remaining vigilant and tenacious for further sustainable
change. There is global momentum for championing women's
equality.
In recent times much progress has been made to protect and
promote women's rights. According to the United Nations, the
majority of the world's 1.3 billion absolute poor are women. On
average, women receive between 30 and 40% less pay than men earn
for the same work. Women continue to be victims of violence, with
rape and domestic violence listed as significant causes of
disability and death among women worldwide
BEYOND BIAS AND BARRIERS,
FULFILLING AND POTENTIAL OF WOMEN IN ACADEMIC SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2007.
Beyond Bias and Barriers: Fulfilling the Potential of Women in Academic Science and Engineering.
Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.
.
In a 2007 report by the
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.
it was found that women were seriously underrepresented on academic science and engineering
faculties because of a mix of 'unintentional' biases and outdated
institutional policies and structures. Women were 'very likely'
to face discrimination, sometimes deliberately but often
inadvertently, in every field of science and engineering. The
discrimination results from a combination of built-in biases
which make them less likely to hire a woman than a man with
identical accomplishments, of evaluation criteria that 'contain
arbitrary and subjective components that disadvantage women.'
The report can be
downloaded as a PDF for free.
The Caribbean Academy of Sciences (CAS) is a member of the
Interamerican Network of Academies of Sciences (IANAS). IANAS
motto is 'Science academies working together to promote
science and technology for development, prosperity and equity in
the Americas'. One of the objectives of the Caribbean
Academy of Sciences is to recognise and reward outstanding
performance and achievement within the region in the fields of
science and technology.
In celebration of Women Day 2013, the
Women for Science-Working Group (Wfs-WG) of the IANAS
published a booklet on the biography of 16 prominent women
scientists in the Academies.
Dr. Grace Sirju-Charran of Trinidad and Tobago is among those
featured in the IANAS booklet.
Dr. Grace Sirju-Charran of Trinidad and Tobago
Grace has spent thirty-seven years at the University of the West
Indies, St. Augustine campus, Trinidad and Tobago. Her initial
doctoral research was on "Enzyme Genesis in Fresh and Aged
Sweet Potato Tuber Tissue". This research provided the basis
for further examination of the role of light in tuberisation of
roots and stems of sweet potato and cassava. She was instrumental
in the re-introduction of pachyrhizus sp. (jicama or yam bean).
Her research included gender and the natural environment and
perspectives and contributions of women scientists in the
Caribbean. Other current interests are on the influence of light
on the expression of genes involved in the storage organ
formation in cassava and sweet potato using RT-PCR microarrays
and a comparison of secondary and nutritional metabolites of root
and stem tubers in sweet potato and cassava. She coordinated the
Women and Development Studies Group at the St. Augustine Campus
during the period 1988-1992 and held several seminars such on
Women in Science and Gender Issues in
Agriculture which culminated in the institutionalisation of
Women and Development Studies as an academic discipline at the
University of the West Indies in 1995. . One of her major
achievements in this area was the introduction of 4-credit
courses on 'Gender and Science' and 'Gender Issues in
Agriculture'. Grace believes that 'almost everyone born on
this planet has a natural curiosity about nature; but this
however does not automatically translate into becoming a
scientist.' In the biography, she reports that 'Equal
participation in science by women is not just a 'gender' issue,
but an economic one resulting in benefits to the whole
society'.
In 2012, Dr. Sirju-Charran was awarded the Vice-Chancellor's
Award for Excellence in Teaching in 2012 and in 2010 the
UWI/Guardian Life Premium Award for Excellence in Teaching. She
received a gold medal for her contribution to plant science
awarded by the National Institute of Higher Education, Research,
Science and Technology (NIHERST). Her biography was included in a
publication on
'Caribbean Women in Science and their Careers'.
Dr. Sirju-Charran faced major challenges in science when she
joined the Faculty to become the only female faculty in the
Department of Botany, while still a PhD candidate and having as
her colleagues, professors who taught her as an undergraduate
student. Breaking the student/professor barrier and gaining the
recognition of being equal at a time when 'gender studies' was
unheard of, proved to be most difficult.
I am proud to be the biographer for Dr.Grace Sirju-Charran in
highlighting the achievements of one of our prominent female
Caribbean scientists.
Congrats to Grace on this recognition!
Professor Neela Badrie is the Caribbean focal point of the
Wfs-WG of IANAS and is the Deputy Dean of the Faculty of Food and
Agriculture, UWI, Trinidad and Tobago.