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Environment key to gender equality Li XingChina Daily Updated: 2005-11-10 05:57
Some 13 years ago I spent a few days climbing my way through the forest in
the Qinling Mountains, in Northwest China's Shaanxi Province.
When I was feeling my legs shaking and breath shortening, I reminded myself
that I was only following beaten mountain trails.
The trailblazers were Professor Pan Wenshi and his then doctoral student Lu
Zhi, of Peking University. When Professor Pan returned to Beijing to fulfill his
class schedules, Lu Zhi stayed on, against all odds of hardship, hunger and
loneliness, to track down the giant pandas living in the Qinling range and learn
about their habitat in the mountains.
Together, they published the world's first comprehensive studies of the giant
pandas living in the wild in the Qinling Mountains. They pointed out that
increased human activity, such as logging, poaching and farming, posed major
threats to the pandas' survival.
Today, logging has stopped and a nature reserve opened in the area.
Meanwhile, Dr Lu Zhi has moved on to become a biology professor and a devoted
conservationist, leading comprehensive projects for nature and wildlife
conservation in the country, especially in western regions.
It came as no surprise that she won the acclaimed "Chinese Young Women in
Science Fellowship" yesterday in Beijing, along with four other women
researchers.
The award winners like Lu Zhi demonstrate that women are as competent as
their male peers in science studies.
However, society has yet to improve its environment to enable more women as
well as girls to have equal opportunities in their professional pursuits as
their male peers, like Lu Zhi and the four award winners.
According to studies, the social and work structure has not been conducive to
women's advancement when they want to return to their jobs after a few years
away attending to their young children, for instance.
Some people continue to discourage women from setting higher goals in their
chosen professions, especially in sciences.
Late last year, Harvard University President Lawrence Summers suggested that
women's brains are not genetically developed for math or science.
Others have jumped on the bandwagon, claiming that women are less ambitious
than men and that their average low pay is of their own doing.
And the media have not been helpful in facilitating a social environment that
advocates gender equality. Some are especially indulgent in emphasizing the
traditional stereotype, as they refuse to recognize the great changes over the
past century and the great contributions half of the world's population have
made towards political, social, cultural, economic and scientific development.
In August, some media were very accommodating when two British academics went
to them with their announcement that "men are significantly cleverer than
women," claiming that male university students outstrip females by almost five
IQ points.
With the cannonballs supplied from the two researchers, some media flashed
such banner headlines as "Girls need manpower" and "IQ tests: women just don't
get it."
It is a delight that the women leaders in all the fields of studies and
professions, including Lu Zhi and four other winners of the science fellowship,
have had no time to get distracted by the biased media blasts.
They have steadfastly been devoted to their own work and research goals
despite all odds, as Lu Zhi frequently says: "I am only enjoying what I do."
It is society's responsibility to create an environment and improve its
structure and system to foster women's development on a par with their male
peers.
It is the media's responsibility to commend and spread their contribution to
scientific advancement and to give confidence to many more girls who aspire for
achievements not only in sciences but in all fields.
Email: lixing@chinadaily.com.cn
(China Daily 11/10/2005 page4)
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