Funders must offer more flexibility to grant applicants who are pregnant or have recently had children, researchers have said.
Lea MĂŒller-Funk, a senior researcher in the department for migration and globalisation at Danube University Krems, started a debate on the issue when her outlining her experience of applying for a European Research Council (ERC) grant accumulated more than 200,000 views.
âI applied for an ERC [grant] this year and am pregnant with my second child,â Dr MĂŒller-Funk wrote. âIf I make it to the second round, the interview is supposed to take place in the same week as my due date. ERC âgenerouslyâ offers to either decide without an interview or to change the date within the same week.â
Speaking to Times Higher Education, Dr MĂŒller-Funk said the inflexibility of application processes was hugely problematic for pregnant researchers and those hoping to have a child.
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âYou canât plan your project proposals according to when you plan to have a child â thatâs not doable,â she said.
Electing not to apply for funding can prove detrimental to researchersâ careers in the long term, said Isabel Torres, chief executive of the non-profit Mothers in Science.
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âIf you miss one career opportunity like a grant, then you will have less chance of getting the next grant, and throughout the career this will have a snowball effect,â Dr Torres said.
Inflexibility around family issues, she added, was a key factor perpetuating academiaâs âleaky pipelineâ, which sees leadership roles dominated by men despite broader gender representation at earlier career stages.
, the ERC said it would âexamine every request to accommodate special needsâ and added that âin nearly all cases we can find a suitable arrangementâ. However, it explained, rescheduling interviews âmay cause delays for other applications whose interests must also be respectedâ.
âI understand, of course, the constraints or the organisational effort that funding agencies face if they have an international reviewer panel,â Dr MĂŒller-Funk told THE. âI just think that the option of having an interview within the week of your due date is really not an acceptable one.
âI think you have to account for the fact that birth is an unpredictable process, and birth is part of human life. So if you want to take equality in research seriously, you have to factor that in.â
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Other academics told THE that the issue was not unique to the ERC. A political scientist who asked to remain anonymous said she had attended an online interview with the Dutch Research Council (NWO) less than a week after undergoing surgery following a miscarriage. The funder said it could postpone the interview by a day or the researcher could withdraw and apply again the following year, skipping the pre-proposal round.
Withdrawing âwasnât really an optionâ, the researcher said. She was nearing the end of her contract and felt the grant was her best chance of securing another position at her institution. Delaying by a day, meanwhile, seemed pointless.
âThe interview was just terrible,â she recalled. âIt felt like IÂ was physically in front of my computer but mentally not really there.â Emailing to ask if the panel could consider her mitigating circumstances, the researcher was told âthis wasnât possibleâ. She did not win the grant.
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â[In academia] your personal circumstances feel like a competitive disadvantage,â she said.
An NWO spokeswoman said it aimed to ensure that interview schedules were âclear and equitable for everyoneâ but noted that rescheduling âmay not be practically feasible in all cases due to tight schedules and committee availabilityâ.
To limit the obstacles faced by pregnant applicants and new parents, Dr Torres suggested, funders could establish rolling deadlines or multiple interview stages throughout the year.
Dr MĂŒller-Funk agreed that funding bodies should implement transparent, universal accommodations for pregnant applicants and those who have recently had a child. âThis should not be decided on an individual level. This disadvantages people who do not speak out,â she said.
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A potential solution, she said, would see pregnant applicants permitted to postpone their interview for a year, with their eligibility frame similarly extended.
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