The Civil Engineering Contractor October 2018 | Page 3
COMMENT
Why engineering needs more women
professional female engineers
totalled only 4%.
These paltry figures should not
be used to discourage women from
the profession, but as a reason
to redouble efforts to transform
its demographics. Engineers play
a massive role in designing the
infrastructure of the world around
us and it cannot be healthy that they
do not reflect the broader society
that the infrastructure serves.
While other countries have moved
on, in South Africa, the profession’s
image remains highly gendered.
The figures position South Africa
at the extreme edge of the gender
spectrum, making it hard to attract
people who would not envisage
themselves as engineers.
The CEO of the Royal Academy
of Engineering, Hayaatun Sillem, is
the first woman to take up the role
and she recently penned an article
saying: “It is encouraging that fewer
people today argue that there are so
few women in engineering because
girls have less interest or ability
in the subject. There’s a growing
body of evidence that debunks
that myth. The evidence just does
not support the idea that there’s
something inherent.”
Yet many female engineers
continue to leave the industry
because of the gender bias they
experience. If female engineers
face challenges in the broader
industry, it is nothing compared
to what they face on the jobsite.
Firms are obliged to employ
women, especially black women,
Eamonn Ryan - editor
[email protected]
T
he issue of female
representation in engineering
is a serious topic that can
become somewhat trivialised by
writing on it in ‘Women’s Month’
(August), as though that is the only
time it rates a mention.
South Africa’s record on
employing female engineers is well
behind countries such as Latvia,
Cyprus, and Bulgaria, where about
30% of their respective engineering
workforces are women, and also
behind Sweden (26%) and Italy
(20%). In countries like Malaysia
and Oman, the engineering
workforce is 50% female, exposing
the fallacy that women are
predisposed to caring and people-
orientated careers alone.
But in South Africa — and Britain
for that matter — the construction
industry has long been infamous
for being a ‘boys club’ with no girls
allowed, with the biggest sexist
cliché being men on a scaffold wolf-
whistling at a passing girl. Out
of SAICE’s database of almost 16
000 members, 17% are women.
Of the number of members who
are professionally registered, just
5% are female. Backing up these
figures, the Engineering Council
of South Africa (ECSA) in 2013
said only 11% of the total number
of engineers registered with the
council were women, but that
but these women are made to feel
unwelcome on site, down even to
lack of dedicated toilet facilities and
even a scarcity of female-designed
personal protective equipment.
Traditionally, women have had
to don workwear designed for
average-sized men, with goggles,
safety boots, and overalls that
do not fit — let alone embrace
their femininity. This reduces the
protective function thereof.
Worse, women continue to be
victimised on site — many men
cannot accept that they are there
to do a professional job. One
complaint frequently heard is that
women have to work twice as
hard as men to be taken seriously
or trusted by men and have to
constantly prove their ability.
Writing in a column, The Hard Hat
Professional, construction consultant
Gretchen Rose Matthews says:
“One thing that I have personally
encountered
repeatedly
is
indifference from subcontractors
and suppliers who are meant to
work under my direction. Even
to this day, when I meet a new
subcontractor or supplier, they
assume I know absolutely nothing
and have the need to re-educate
me on my job. I have even had to
work with male professionals who
refuse to speak to me directly and
will speak about me in the third
person to my male counterparts in
my presence.”
Women continue to be victimised on site, as some men cannot accept they’re there to
do a professional job.
CEC October 2018 - 1