...Next month, Japan's government will launch a new category of grants open only to parents returning to the scientific workforce after extended childrearing breaks. It is part of a package of initiatives that also includes grants for institutions to develop schemes to help women balance research careers and family life. The underlying objective--set out in a draft 5-year policy plan--is to have women claim 25% of all new science and engineering positions at governmental institutions...But many worry that the measures will barely dent the formidable bar riers that women face. A shortage of daycare facilities and a tradition of long working hours make research careers difficult for mothers with young children. The biggest challenge may be raising the consciousness of senior--primarily male--administrators. Labs and universities "are far from ever thinking of what it takes to be a mother and a scientist," says Kuniko Inoguchi, minister of gender equality and social affairs and a former professor at Sophia University in Tokyo.
The Japanese government has taken up the gauntlet out of embarrassment, not chivalry. In 2004, women made up only 11.1% of the scientific workforce, the lowest proportion among the 30 member countries of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. (Portugal has the highest rate, more than 40%; the U.S. f igure is 26%.) "This is a very dubious honor for Japan," says Akira Kawamoto, director for science and technology policy in the cabinet office. The percentage of women scientists has remained low despite rising achievement. In 2004, women made up 23% of those enrolled in science and engineering doctoral programs, up from less than 15% in 1995. Yet few women find permanent academic jobs. At Japan's national universities, the proportion of women holding associate professorships is stuck at about 10%...more...