TY - BOOK
T1 - Mother Nature Needs Her Daughters: A Homeward Bound Global Review and Fact Sheet Investigating Gender Inequality in STEMM
AU - Dattner, Fabian
AU - Adams, Sophie
AU - Alexander, Karen
AU - Cano, Melissa
AU - Clarke, Kate
AU - Clarke, Kelsie
AU - Collins, Deirdre
AU - Conn, Charlotte
AU - Doyle, Bec
AU - Dubini, Alex
AU - Eugene-Jones, Tiffini
AU - Feeney, Mary-Ellen
AU - Goh, Anita MY
AU - Gray, Tonia
AU - Hann, Madeleine
AU - Hart, Melissa
AU - Hessenberger, Daisy
AU - Humanes, Adriana
AU - Jahangir, Arthee
AU - Lopez, Uxua
AU - Oaten, Megan
AU - Payo Payo, Ana
AU - Perez-Porro, Alicia
AU - Sealey, Katrina
AU - Taranovic, Valentina
AU - Unterstell, Natalie
AU - Verspoor, Karin
AU - Ward-Fear, Georgia
AU - Wang, Li
AU - Wehi, Cilla
N1 - © Western Sydney University
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The world is at an important cross road. Many key indicators measuring human progress are on the ascent: better education, declining infant mortality, population growth, fewer pandemics, and reduction of infectious disease; more food for most people, extraordinary innovation and global access to technology and information. However, as a consequence of these human achievements, the physical environment and natural systems which support the survival of our species (and 9 million others) are experiencing unprecedented change. Most notably, the planet's climate is rapidly heating, with a multitude of unpredictable consequences for biodiversity and food security. Globally we are experiencing largescale habitat destruction and deforestation, rampant biological invasions, a mass extinction, ubiquitous plastic pollution, collapse of natural food resources and critical loss of insect populations. The biological system is at tipping point, under threat of irreversible collapse; at this pivotal time, we need collaborative, global leadership that prioritises these issues. We are cognizant that the very practice of leadership that got us to where we are today - male dominated, competitive, aggressive, short term, 'I' over 'we', and often using the common assets for personal gain - is manifestly unsuited to guiding humanity to where it needs to be to survive and indeed prosper - together. Indeed, we need a radically new model of leadership; the easiest way to shift the current leadership paradigm? Include more women. To inform this discussion, we have compiled an extensive literature review and fact sheet on the systemic challenges faced by women with a STEMM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics and Medicine) background in both the developed and developing world.
AB - The world is at an important cross road. Many key indicators measuring human progress are on the ascent: better education, declining infant mortality, population growth, fewer pandemics, and reduction of infectious disease; more food for most people, extraordinary innovation and global access to technology and information. However, as a consequence of these human achievements, the physical environment and natural systems which support the survival of our species (and 9 million others) are experiencing unprecedented change. Most notably, the planet's climate is rapidly heating, with a multitude of unpredictable consequences for biodiversity and food security. Globally we are experiencing largescale habitat destruction and deforestation, rampant biological invasions, a mass extinction, ubiquitous plastic pollution, collapse of natural food resources and critical loss of insect populations. The biological system is at tipping point, under threat of irreversible collapse; at this pivotal time, we need collaborative, global leadership that prioritises these issues. We are cognizant that the very practice of leadership that got us to where we are today - male dominated, competitive, aggressive, short term, 'I' over 'we', and often using the common assets for personal gain - is manifestly unsuited to guiding humanity to where it needs to be to survive and indeed prosper - together. Indeed, we need a radically new model of leadership; the easiest way to shift the current leadership paradigm? Include more women. To inform this discussion, we have compiled an extensive literature review and fact sheet on the systemic challenges faced by women with a STEMM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics and Medicine) background in both the developed and developing world.
KW - gender equality
KW - leadership
KW - women
UR - http://handle.westernsydney.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:52124
U2 - 10.26183/5d22d5fbe2349
DO - 10.26183/5d22d5fbe2349
M3 - Research report
BT - Mother Nature Needs Her Daughters: A Homeward Bound Global Review and Fact Sheet Investigating Gender Inequality in STEMM
PB - Western Sydney University
CY - Penrith, N.S.W.
ER -