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Essays on Science and SocietyAlso see the archival list of the Essays on Science and Society.ESSAYS ON SCIENCE AND SOCIETY:
Farkhonda Hassan* |
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| TABLE 1. PERCENT FEMALE STUDENTS ENROLLED IN B.SC. COURSES 1990-1991 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Country | Total enrollment | Percent female |
| Algeria | 182,282 | 44 |
| Bahrain | 3,785 | 68 |
| Djibouti | 1,068 | 8 |
| Egypt | 525,931 | 35 |
| Iraq | 124,142 | 40 |
| Jordan | 34,984 | 45 |
| Kuwait | 14,412 | 67 |
| Lebanon | 75,525 | 48 |
| Libya | 53,611 | 31 |
| Mauritania | 5,339 | 14 |
| Morocco | 200,429 | 37 |
| Oman | 3,258 | 50 |
| Palestine | 16,422 | 38 |
| Qatar | 4,515 | 69 |
| Saudi Arabia | 124,886 | 27 |
| Somalia | 4,641 | 15 |
| Sudan | 59,459 | 45 |
| Syria | 169,913 | 37 |
| Tunisia | 56,392 | 38 |
| U.A.E. | 10,462 | 70 |
| Yemen | 42,165 | 17 |
| Total/average | 1,713,621 | 35 |
| Source: UNESCO, The Higher Education System in the Arab States (1993). | ||
Recently, there has been a small but noticeable shift in the type of scientific disciplines chosen by Muslim women, with more female students selecting courses in engineering, physics, mathematics, computer sciences, and the geosciences. For example, at The Lebanese University, the percentage of women studying engineering increased from 16% in 1992-93 to 20% in 1996-97, and in Syria, the total percentage of women studying civil engineering increased from 14.4% in 1980 to 30.5% in 1994.
Encouraging though this trend may be, it does not necessarily mean that greater career opportunities await women graduating in science subjects.
In Muslim countries, career opportunities for female science graduates in universities, research institutes,
and scientific organizations are considerably more limited than those for men particularly in senior positions, although accurate statistics are scarce. Available published literature mainly discusses how technological changes have affected the household duties of women or the work environment where automation has led to their displacement. In Egypt, a survey by the Supreme Council of Universities for 1995-96 reports that in disciplines such as pharmacy and dentistry, more than 40% of the faculty are women; in the sciences, 25% of the faculty are women, but this decreases to less than 10% in departments of engineering and technology (Table 2). Perhaps surprisingly, these statistics are very similar to those for U.S. universities, where women constitute 50% of health sciences faculty, 23.8% of biological sciences faculty, and 6.1% of engineering faculty.§
| TABLE 2. PERCENT FEMALE FACULTY MEMBERS IN EGYPT | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Faculty members | ||||
| Faculty | Males | Females | Total | Percent female |
| Medicine | 4717 | 1913 | 6630 | 28.9 |
| Veterinary medicine | 730 | 118 | 848 | 13.9 |
| Dentistry | 372 | 253 | 625 | 40.5 |
| Pharmacy | 357 | 273 | 630 | 43.3 |
| Sciences | 2767 | 941 | 3708 | 25.4 |
| Engineering and technology | 2727 | 283 | 3010 | 9.4 |
| Agriculture | 2525 | 402 | 2927 | 13.7 |
| Source: Egyptian Supreme Council of Universities (1995-96). | ||||
There are a number of sociocultural factors that limit career advancement opportunities in science and technology for Muslim women. Women are raised and educated in a male-dominated society with very traditional attitudes and constraints. These vary greatly not only from one Muslim country to the next, but also between, for example, urban and rural areas of the same country. Other factors, well-known to Western women, also exist, such as the challenges of combining responsibilities for a household and family (usually extended family) with a professional career. In addition, because scientific communities are highly resistant to change and science itself advances at a remarkable pace, it is extremely difficult for a woman to re-enter the scientific workforce once she has put her career on hold to raise a family.
A look at female scientists in different fields in most Islamic countries indicates that the more powerful the scientific institution, the less open it is to having women in senior positions. As in many other developed and developing countries, women are notably absent from leadership roles and positions of responsibility in institutions concerned with science policy and administration. In a few Muslim countries, the percentage of female scientists in managerial and policy-making positions has been increasing, but at a considerably lower rate than the increase in numbers of women qualified to hold such positions.
Despite all the constraints and obstacles in Islamic countries, women scientists have achieved considerable professional progress within a short period of time. Although there is an increasing pool of highly qualified women scientists in some Islamic countries, few women in universities and research institutes are presidents, deans, departmental chairs, directors of institutes, or heads of divisions or laboratories. Very few women scientists are involved in the political life of their countries, although those who are involved have proved to be strong advocates for science and technological development and for protecting the environment. It is important that more Muslim women scientists are encouraged to enter politics where their voices will be heard.
A few female scientists from Muslim countries serve on national and international committees where they have the opportunity to promote science and technology at both the national and global level. In Egypt, Venice Gouda, a Ph.D. chemist, was minister for scientific research from 1994 to 1997. The Executive Board of the Third World Organization for Women in Science (TWOWS).|| includes Muslim women scientists from Nigeria, Jordan, Kuwait, and Egypt.
There has been progress in the education of women from Muslim countries in science and technology but there is still a long way to go. In the words of Kofi Annan, as he launched a U.N. global initiative earlier this year to educate girls, "Let us prove that a society which empowers its women is a society sure to succeed."¶
*A. Salam, Ideals and Realities. C. H. Lai, Ed. (World Scientific, Singapore, 1987).
§Digest of Education Statistics. (U.S. Department of Education, 1999).
Supplementary Web material is available to Science Online subscribers www.sciencemag.org/feature/data/1055893.shl.
A Report from the European Technology Assessment Network (ETAN) Expert Working Group on Women and Science (European Commission, Luxembourg, 1999).
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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)