A team of scientists at NYU Abu Dhabi (NYUAD) published new findings on the prevalence and perspectives of women conducting coral reef research across the six member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) spanning the Arabian Gulf, Gulf of Oman, Arabian Sea, and Red Sea. Their research suggests that despite the persistence of a gender divide in publication output and senior authorship position, more women have authored publications in recent years, reflecting a six-fold increase in publications authored by females over the last decade alone.
In the paper titled The growing role of women in coral reef research in the Gulf Cooperation Council published in the journal Biological Conservation, Emirati co-authors and Kawader research fellows at NYUAD Amal Al-Gergawi and Maryam Al-Memari reviewed 852 reef-related studies published from the 1930s to 2021 in the GCC. The process involved classifying the studies as either female-inclusive (including at least one female author) or male-exclusive (consisting of only male authors), while also noting key factors such as female author nationality/region, authorship position, and study country. Of the 405 female authors whose work was included in the review, 47 (11.6 percent) were interviewed. Six themes emerged from the interviews; these include history of female contributions to reef science in the GCC, success factors for scientific productivity, barriers affecting professional practice, author collaboration and credit, growing presence of Khaleeji researchers, and parachute science (i.e. scientists from the global north who travel into a foreign community for fieldwork).
While coral reef science publications in the region first emerged in 1964, the first female-inclusive journal article wasn’t published until 21 years later, in 1985. The contributions of women marginally increased between the 1990s and the early 2010s (<10 percent of total publications), but experienced a dramatic expansion after 2014 - increasing by more than six-fold over the past decade. Despite the increased inclusion of published female reef scientists in the GCC, a ratio of 1:3 female-to-male scientists was observed, with most females positioned as supporting authors. Over half of published female scientists were researchers from the Global North (65.2 percent), while researchers from GCC nations were a minority (11 percent).
The study proposes practical steps that conservation researchers, practitioners, and institutions can take to bring about more equitable and participatory practices, including promoting marine science and conservation as a feasible and locally relevant career and allocating more resources toward research funding, capacity-building training, and leadership opportunities for gender transformative development, especially early career female researchers at public institutions.