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In order to achieve a competitive, knowledge-based economy (cf. the Lisbon summit, 2000), the Barcelona summit in 2002 set the R&D investment target of 3% of GDP by 2010. To reach this goal, the number of researchers in Europe will have to increase enormously. This is a great challenge to improve the numbers and careers of women in research. Indeed, we will not reach the 3% objective if we fail to recrute, retain and promote the women who constitute an important share of Europe's pool of trained scientists.
The main aspect of the European Conference has been to move from the bottom-up approach aiming to increase the value of the university and scientific research autonomy in order to foster gender equality objectives at a national and European level. The target was to outline concrete conditions and positive synergies facilitating the adoption of gender-oriented policies through exchanging experiences and comparing policy measures, at the same time pointing out reasons for resistance to change.
Because of the policy importance for a range of stakeholders of the question of human resources in European Science, and due to the increasing recognition of the potential value of women scientists in the economy, there has been extremely rapid development in the availability of comparable sex-disaggregated statistics in the last few years. A strong statistics programme has therefore been implemented at EU level as an integral part of the Women and Science Unit in DG Research.
The need for comparable data means that more frameworks for harmonisation and better definitions need to be developed in new areas (for example women in ICT research). Another required task is to supplement and complement statistical data collection with other types of methods that we have to investigate; even more difficult than quantitative analysis is the elucidation of more qualitative issues. Inequality and social dynamics that produces it are known to be difficult to measure in supra-level statistics.
A further possible objective is to create a network among actors of sound initiatives as an interacting  site to monitor and analyse the situation in academic and research institutions as a tool to foster gender mainstreaming in the ERA dimension.
Although women remain seriously under-represented in science and R&D across Europe, the extent of the under-representation varies and is closely linked to different cultural, social and economic settings of each country. These differences should also be taken into account in interpreting data. Measuring gender inequalities in Science is a crucial challenge and an indispensable tool in order to continue developing the knowledge base for mainstreaming equality at European level.

National and European discourses on gender high education and research address two distinct issues: gender mainstreaming as a gender equality/equal opportunity issue; gender mainstreaming as a research and theory issue. The work done by the Helsinki Group concerning the development of indicators more sophisticated than simply head counting is a valuable tool in having more women in research groups. It is also an example of how attention for equal opportunities within the research community may intersect with the effort of introducing a gender perspective in the research agenda.
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WOMEN IN SCIENCE


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