The GEDII project examines the relationship between gender diversity in research teams and their research performance. During three years and counting on partners from Sweden, Germany and the UK, GEDII aims to produce new insights how the proportion between men and women and associated gender stereotypes affect the quality and quantity of research outputs. Although past work hints at the importance of gender aspects for the quality and innovation of research, its real payoff remains very unevenly evidenced. Using innovative methods for analyzing the diversity-performance relationship, the project will develop in the first place a reliable gender diversity measure that is sensitive to power, status and information sharing differentials within research teams and across public & private organisations. This Gender-Diversity-Index (GDI) will establishes a nuanced and realistic baseline in order to assess the impact of gender diversity across countries and sectors. In a second step, the GDI scores will then be set in relation to a flexible set of performance indicators, including patent and bibliometric measures across Europe, combined with new indicators of social impact. Part of the challenge clearly consists of bringing together insights from very diverse knowledge fields such as gender studies, the “science of team science”, and research evaluation. By combining these disparate conceptual approaches with an innovative assessment tool, GEDII strives to provide a clear and comprehensive framework for assessing the link between gender diversity and research performance.
There are three overarching objectives:
Develop concepts and tools for assessing the antecedents, processes and outcomes of gender diversity on research performance in teams and organisations
* develop through 4 case studies a method for detecting and measuring how gendered role expectations and behaviours shape team communication and information sharing
* develop and test a scalable, reliable statistical measure of gender diversity that is context aware and sensitive to the gendered structures of team work
Targeting the team and organisational level, assess the benefits of gender diversity for science and society
* develop and test a flexible assessment framework that links our gender-diversity measure to a combination of traditional (patents & publications) and new and emerging performance indicators
* generate empirical evidence through a 5 country / 2 sector survey on the multiple effects of gender diversity on research performance and its moderating variables
Stimulate public awareness and support change-enabling engagement in science, industry, policy and civil society through innovative societal dialogues about the evidence-based, comparable benefits of gender-diversity.