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Sunday 17 March 2013

Data needs diversity too



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Rachel Salmon spoke to Yodit Stanton, founder of a new organisation supporting women who work with numbers.

Stanton, a computer programmer, founded Women in Data earlier this year after she saw that the conferences she attended were very male dominated.

“You are lucky if you get three women,” she said.

“A lot of men are going into data, it was a realisation that history was repeating itself.

“It’s not that women aren’t there, it’s that they are not visible.

"It’s about getting them published, getting them speaking at conferences and getting change at a higher level.”

“Once an industry is established it is very difficult to change that, but If you catch it early it’s easier to change things."

'Women in Data' was launched ahead of Open Data day on 22 February.

'Open data' is about democratising decision-making like the internet democratised communication and information exchange.

Stanton hopes that open data will change the structures and concentration of power from the few to the crowd and fundamentally change the dynamics of interaction between citizens and organisations.

Stanton also hopes that Women in Data will give women more confidence to speak about their work, which, in turn, will help more women take senior roles in the industry and influence working patterns.

“When you speak to men who organise conferences, they tend to recruit speakers from within their own social groups.  They tend to go with the status quo so they don’t have to think about it much.

“Women are there at graduate level, but we need more decision makers,” she said.

Stanton believes that women bring their own experiences to bear when interpreting data, giving it added context and meaning.

“When you are looking at population level data you can make a lot of assumptions based on your own perspective.

“For example, there is a lot of talk about making better decisions about aid, but if you don’t understand how families are structured it makes a massive difference to how data is interpreted and how decisions are made.

“You get MIT educated men who are interpreting data, but you need to understand how everyday life is, because you can’t make your own assumptions about it.

Stanton has been amazed at how well the new organisation has been received.

It has already held a networking event at the Open Data Institute, and is planning a training day for data specialists who want to set up their own businesses in partnership with NESTA.

“We also want to get female engineers to talk about what they are working on, get people connected.

“Lots of our members are working on very interesting projects, so hopefully they will share what they are doing, they will get the confidence to talk about what they are working on and share that with the wider world.

"Hopefully they will be a bit more vocal about what they are doing.”

Stanton believes this is vital in overcoming what researchers from Yale called the subtle gender bias against women at all levels in science.

“These are intellectual heavyweights, these are not dinosaurs, but they would rate candidates with male names higher than females, and there was a tendency to mentor them towards leadership.

“It’s an unconscious thing, but it’s positive to know that there is this bias so we can overcome it.

“My theory is that if we get more women out there and see them as leading then change will happen.  People will see it as normal.

“If more women are heads of companies and have more buying power they will make decisions that are beneficial to the company as well as themselves."

Stanton now works freelance, but she used to work for Leman Brothers.

She had her first child around the time they went bust.

“I faced a choice to work in the presenteeism culture of a bank and miss out on my child,” she said.

She now fits her work around her children.

“My clients don’t mind when I work.  If you work in an organisation you are expected to be there nine to five.

“Now I have set up my own company I have never been so skilled. I have the motivation to learn new skills I am managing my own career and I am able to meet new people.

“I have never been so in demand, it’s ironic really,” she aid.

Stanton is currently setting up a company called Atomic Data Labs, to develop computer programmes to process data.

She intends to use her experiences to create a more flexible working environment for the people she employs.

“We will have a loose structure that gives workers autonomy to choose their hours. We will not dictate, as long as we can work together and do the work. It doesn’t matter how that is done.

“We will see what difference that makes to productivity.

"I find without the structures I am a lot more productive, I can work six hours instead of eight and walk away,” she said.

Story published on Women's Views on News, Thursday, 14 March, 2013. 

What has the EU done for women?


Debate concluded that the EU has improved women’s rights in the UK over the last 40 years.  But the future may not be so bright, reports Rachel Salmon, who was in the audience.

The European Parliament Information Office in the UK and the National Alliance of Women's Organisations hosted a debate on 7 March called 'What has the EU done for Gender Equality' to coincide with International Women's Day.

It was also one of the events organised to mark the 40th anniversary of Britain joining the EU.

One of the speakers, Dr Roberta Guerrina, Senior Lecturer and Head of the School of Politics at the University of Surrey believed the EU had been very instrumental in establishing employment rights for women.

“The introduction of the Equal Pay Act in 1970 was influenced by the prospect of accession, in that the UK would have had to implement it.

“The 1992 Pregnant Worker Directive and the 1996 Parental Leave Directive, which also included fathers, allows six months, albeit unpaid, and three months for the woman, which was non-transferrable.

"The UK has gone beyond these basic measures, but positive employment rights have consolidated women’s positions as workers.”

Justine Roberts, founder and CEO of Mumsnet, said she believed the EU needed to do more to publicise the good work it has done for women.

“Most are aware of maternity and part-time workers rights, but we can’t get away from the fact that even graduates have less pay.  There is still a lot to be done.

“It is important, given that we may have a referendum coming up.
"Women are delighted that they have time off to go to ante-natal clinic, but they don’t join the dots,” she said.

Marina Yannakoudakis, Conservative MEP for London, who was instrumental in blocking EU plans to give women 20 weeks maternity leavesaid the EU did most for women’s rights when it worked together to prevent Female Genital Mutilation, sex trafficking and enforced marriage.

“I wouldn’t like the EU to push more legislation, particularly on small and medium sized businesses,” she said.

Labour MEP Mary Honeyball said she believed that some of the EU’s recent work to promote equal access to goods and services was breaking new ground for women.

She said that new EU regulations were forcing the insurance industry to take a close look at the way it worked so that women received the same pensions as men.

“If you get EU legislation it filters down and makes people look at what they are doing,” she pointed out.

Jacqueline Minor, head of the European Commission Representation in London, said that half of the staff employed by EU institutions were now women, but women make up only 28 per cent of the top three grades. When she joined it was just 10 per cent.

“We tend to find women in HR or coordinating jobs rather than hard policy jobs,” she said.

The EU was addressing this by encouraging more women to apply and taking measures to stop ‘cloning’, the tendency for managers to replace an employee with someone with similar skills and characteristics, which would work against women in a male-dominated workplace.

But there was concern that, in future, the EU may not be such a force for good for women.

“The accession of Central and Eastern European states has led to retrenchment.  There are a large number of socially conservative states sending Justices to the European Court of Justice.

“It has become much less an advocate for women’s rights, it is sitting on the fence, it is more conservative, especially when it comes to issues relating to care,” said Guerrina.

“In the southern states of the EU, women are actively discriminated against for having children.  Italy now has the lowest birth rate in the world.  Women have gone on strike because of the impact of non-equality,” she added.

“A lot of the impetus for change in the past came from the UK.

"The Equal Opportunities Commission and the Trades Unions were very clever at picking cases that would advance rights.

"This has slowed down of late,” she said.

There was also concern about David Cameron’s intention to renegotiate Britain’s EU membership if he wins the next UK election and plans to transfer powers, currently governed by the EU, back to the British parliament.

The TUC's General Secretary Frances O’Grady, was unable to attend. But in a written statement to the meeting, she said she did not believe repatriating powers from the EU would lead to improved social protection.

“As inequality grows and living standards fall I hope we will win the case for keeping Europe social for men and especially for women,” she wrote.
Honeyball believed Cameron’s talk of repatriation was wishful thinking.

“The UK won’t be in a position to put together a qualified majority which this will need.  I am not convinced by the negotiating skills of George Osborne or David Cameron,” she said.

Yannakoudakis said that Angela Merkel had welcomed Cameron’s latest speech about reshaping the EU.

“If we repatriate these powers, it doesn’t mean that all maternity rights will go away tomorrow,” she said.

But Roberts sounded a note of caution.

“Fifty one per cent of the voting population are female.

"It is unlikely that David Cameron would start messing with the gender equality rules. The women’s vote is important.

And she continued, "The Leader of the Conservative Party is not ranking as well as he once was."

“We know UKIP is doing well with some ex Tory voters,” she said.

And she said that when Mumsnet hosted a discussion with UKIP leader Nigel Farage he repeated Alan Sugar’s mantra that ‘no employer in his right mind would employ a women of child-bearing age’.

Story published in Women's Views on News, Friday, 15 March, 2013.

Saturday 2 March 2013

Film festival to celebrate Arab women


The Birds Eye View film festival promises spectacular line up of creative voices from the Arab world.

The 2013 Bird's Eye View film festival, an annual event celebrating women filmmakers, opens in London next month, and this year features the work of women from across the Arab world.

There will be an International Women’s Day gala screening of 'Wadija', Saudi Arabia’s first feature film, from breakthrough female director Haifaa Al Mansour, which tells the story of a rebellious schoolgirl who wants a bicycle, and when her parents refuse, determines to raise the money herself.

Wadjda won multiple awards at the Venice Film Festival for its inspiring, sharply humorous and gently subversive look at a life in modern-day Riyadh.

On 3 April the main film festival, Celebrating Arab Women Filmmakers, will have an Opening Night Gala featuring 'When I Saw You' from Palestine's first female feature director, Annemarie Jacir,  following a free-spirited young boy escaping from a refugee camp in Jordan in 1967.

Other features include 'Coming Forth by Day', which follows an unmarried woman dutifully caring for her sick father as she tries to escape to a life of her own, and 'On the Edge', which depicts two young women as they plunge into the underside of Moroccan life.

The festival will also feature documentaries such as 'In the Shadow of a Man' exploring recent events in Egypt from a woman’s perspective and 'A Tale of Two Syrias', which looks at the country’s mounting unrest from two very different perspectives.

There will also be a series of short films and special events like Sound and Silents, where modern composers perform their own scores to silent movies, and Fashion Loves Film, this year exploring Middle Eastern fashion past and present.

Birds Eye View founder-director Rachel Millward said: I’m thrilled that in 2013 Birds Eye View will celebrate the work of Arab women filmmakers.

"Now, when Arab women are dominating the headlines at the world's most established film festivals, is the perfect time to shine a light on this increasingly important and diverse range of cinematic voices.’
Bird’s Eye View 2013 takes place on International Women's Week, 7 and 8 March 2013, at the Southbank Centre and BFI Southbank.

The main film festival, Celebrating Arab Women Filmmakers, runs from 3-10 April 2013 at the BFI Southbank, the Barbican, the ICA and at Hackney Picturehouse.

Tickets are on sale now.

Story published in Women's Views on News, February 25, 2013.

The TUC looks at age and pay


Age Immaterial' aims to shed light on five issues faced by older women at work.

The Trades Union Congress (TUC) has launched a new initiative, called Age Immaterial, to discuss and highlight the concerns of women aged 50 and over at work.

It has identified five key concerns; pay, caring responsibilities, age and sex discrimination and health, and will release detailed reports on each.

The first of these reports, focusing on the pay gap between older women and other workers, was released last week.

It found that women in their 50s earn nearly a fifth less than men of the same age - the widest gender pay gap of any age group.

The analysis shows that despite a dramatic rise in the number of women working past 50, low pay and pensioner poverty remain major concerns for them as they approach retirement.

A woman in her 50s working full-time currently earns £11.99 per hour - 18 per cent less per hour than a man of a similar age  at £14.69.

This compares to a 10 per cent gender pay gap across the workforce as a whole.

Women in their 50s also earn less per hour than women in their 30s - £14.17 - and 40s - £12.93).

But the TUC analysis shows that full-time earnings only tell half the story, as half of all women over 50 are employed in part-time work.

The average hourly part-time wage for a woman in her 50s is just £8.53 - a third less than the average full-time wage across the UK workforce  of £12.76.

The majority of women over 50 in part-time work earn less than £10,000 a year.

The TUC analysis also shows that older women have seen the fastest jobs growth in the last two decades.

In 1992, the majority of women over 50 were not active in the labour market.

Today, just 37 per cent of females over 50 are economically inactive, while three in five are in work.

But while rising employment rates for older women is good news, the TUC is concerned that a lack of good quality, part-time work means that many working women are still struggling to save enough for their retirement, despite working for longer than ever.

TUC General Secretary Frances O'Grady said: “The rising number of women over 50 in work has been the great success story of the last two decades.

“But while more women are working for longer, low pay remains a big problem, particularly for the millions who have been badly let down by the pension system and who are approaching retirement with little or no savings.

“Part-time work is the only option available for many older women who also have to look after loved ones, either their grandchildren or their own parents, or who may no longer be able to work long hours.

"Most of these women earn less than £10,000 a year, barely enough to live on, let alone save for their retirement.

“As the workforce ages, it's essential that people are able to work part-time hours without having to give up decent pay.”

Follow Age Immaterial on Twitter @ageimmaterial, or sign up to their blog.

Story published in Women's Views on News, February 27, 2013.