[10:00 GMT - 05/11/2019]
A letter from UKRI to the House of Commons Select Committee on Science and Technology reveals a shocking disparity in the success rates of female, disabled and ethnic minority applicants for research funding compared to their white, male, non-disabled, counterparts. However, the published data, fail to provide sufficient detail or disaggregation to enable the development and implementation of evidence-based interventions needed to reform our research funding ecosystem. This falls short of what was requested by the Committee and as a consequence we are requesting the provision of detailed datasets from across the research councils. This will ensure UKRI research has wider societal impact and is better reflective of UK taxpayers, who essentially fund UKRI research.
Norman Lamb MP, Chair of the House of Commons Select Committee on Science and Technology wrote to Sir Mark Walport, head of UKRI, on 9th September 2019 to request a detailed and substantive response on the distribution of UK funding for scientific research to individuals with protected characteristics. The aim was to provide evidence to support the start of an inquiry into the impact of funding policy on equality and diversity in science, based on a #MyScienceInquiry proposal led by Prof Rachel Oliver and other members of The Inclusion Group for Equity in Research in STEMM (TIGERS). Sir Mark responded on 30th October 2019.
TIGERS welcome UKRI’s initial engagement with the questions posed by the Select Committee. However, a key aspect of the original request was for data disaggregation of separate themes within the different research councils in order to enable unbiased and comprehensive scrutiny. However, the UKRI response does not even disaggregate between the different research councils, thereby preventing independent analysis. Moreover, the available data do not even focus on STEMM. A multitude of issues may be hidden within the aggregated data, given the substantial differences between the different UKRI research communities. We call for greater transparency from UKRI. Finally, UKRI have also failed to compare their data to HESA’s analysis of the demographics of UK academic staff, so we cannot evaluate populations to establish who are members of underrepresented groups.
UKRI are certainly aware of the problems posed by the lack of disaggregation in the reporting of their data. They state “There is considerable variation amongst the 7 Research Councils in proportion of applicants, awards, success rates and award amounts.” They note that individual councils will report in November, but it is unclear why this data was not included in the report to the Commons Select Committee Chair, or whether their later report will address the questions posed by the Select Committee, such as variation in the success rate of applicants from minority groups with grant size.
Although the UKRI response is deeply lacking in terms of a full and granular analysis, it does reveal a number of striking trends. Success rates for women who apply for grants are consistently and statistically significantly lower than the success rates for men. Women also consistently receive smaller grants on average than men. Furthermore, there are even greater differences in success rates between white principal investigators and those from minority ethnic backgrounds. Whilst white applicants achieve a success rate in applying for grant funding of 27%, this rate is only 17% for those from ethnic minorities. The average amount of those grants which ethnic minority applicants do receive is almost 20% lower than those received by white investigators. The UKRI has made no effort to produce an intersectional analysis, to address the compound challenges faced by women from ethnic minority backgrounds, which one must assume will be considerable.
The UKRI response offers little justice to those who are concerned about the fairness of our funding processes, with very few concrete plans in place to address these disparities. With a snap general election being called, the Commons Select Committee will not be able to continue the business it had planned for this parliament, including progressing this inquiry. It is imperative that when the Committee is reconvened for the next parliament, this inquiry is immediately reintroduced to the agenda, to address the significant issues which even UKRI’s limited analysis reveals.
We urge UKRI to publish data with the granularity and detail requested by the STC and to commit to greater transparency in future concerning data on these topics. This will allow the scientific community to analyse the data in detail, a necessary step to finding evidence-based solutions. TIGERS will, in the meantime, continue to lobby UKRI to make real and lasting change to their policies and processes in order to achieve improved equity, diversity, inclusion and accessibility in STEMM.
TIGERS are ready and waiting to engage with the process alongside UKRI and the future CommonsSTC.
Members of TIGERS say:
[Edit - a text scan of the letter has been kindly provided by @Divya_M_P here]
— Editors notes:
The Inclusion Group for Equity in Research in STEMM (TIGERS) are a voluntary group of staff and students employed in the UK in science, technology, engineering, medicine and maths. You can find out more of our work via our website: www.tigerinstemm.org; on twitter as @tigerinstemm; or via email: roar@tigerinstemm.org
We are working together to improve equality, diversity, inclusion and accessibility in STEMM and view the #MyScienceInquiry as a piece in the jigsaw of addressing these issues within the UK funding landscape.