Please note that to be considered for this collection, the first author or at least one corresponding author should be a researcher who identifies as a woman.After the well-received
2022 collection, Frontiers in Microbiology is proud to host this Research Topic celebrating women’s work and achievements in the field of Infectious Agents and Disease. Alongside International Women’s Day and Women’s History Month 2023, we will collectively embrace equity in the microbiology community.
There is continued gender disparity within core STEM subjects. According to UNESCO Institute for Statistics, just 33% of the world's researchers are women. While the number of women attending university is growing, they still represent the minority of doctoral students and researchers. Women remain under-represented in the highest level of academia, holding just 26% of full professorships. This is even more skewed in industry with just 3% of STEM industry CEOs being women. As highlighted by UNESCO, science and gender equality are essential to ensure sustainable development.
This Research Topic will act as a platform to promote the work of female researchers across the entire breadth of
Infectious Agents and Disease, including:
• Emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, and zoonotic infectious diseases;
• Causal agents of human disease including infections acquired in healthcare settings;
• Experimental pathogenicity studies that better represent the diversity of pathogenic species;
• Applied research studies that may lead to development of rapid and accurate identification tests and adapted prevention/treatment measures.
This Research Topic is open for submissions including Original Research, Reviews, Mini Reviews, Methods, Opinion and Perspective articles. All manuscripts will be handled by female editors.
Any articles focused on research metrics and gender perspectives or bias in scientific publications would be best suited in Frontiers in Research Metrics and Analytics journal. Please note that to be considered for this collection, the first author or at least one corresponding author should be a researcher who identifies as a woman.After the well-received
2022 collection, Frontiers in Microbiology is proud to host this Research Topic celebrating women’s work and achievements in the field of Infectious Agents and Disease. Alongside International Women’s Day and Women’s History Month 2023, we will collectively embrace equity in the microbiology community.
There is continued gender disparity within core STEM subjects. According to UNESCO Institute for Statistics, just 33% of the world's researchers are women. While the number of women attending university is growing, they still represent the minority of doctoral students and researchers. Women remain under-represented in the highest level of academia, holding just 26% of full professorships. This is even more skewed in industry with just 3% of STEM industry CEOs being women. As highlighted by UNESCO, science and gender equality are essential to ensure sustainable development.
This Research Topic will act as a platform to promote the work of female researchers across the entire breadth of
Infectious Agents and Disease, including:
• Emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases, and zoonotic infectious diseases;
• Causal agents of human disease including infections acquired in healthcare settings;
• Experimental pathogenicity studies that better represent the diversity of pathogenic species;
• Applied research studies that may lead to development of rapid and accurate identification tests and adapted prevention/treatment measures.
This Research Topic is open for submissions including Original Research, Reviews, Mini Reviews, Methods, Opinion and Perspective articles. All manuscripts will be handled by female editors.
Any articles focused on research metrics and gender perspectives or bias in scientific publications would be best suited in Frontiers in Research Metrics and Analytics journal.