For those of you not in the university sector this scheme started out to address the low numbers of women staying the course from undergraduate study through to senior academic roles in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines. Over the last few years, the scheme has been extended to include the arts and humanities disciplines. Some public research funding bodies require a department or institution to have an Athena Swan award to be eligible to apply for funding, so it matters if a department or individual researcher in a department wants to apply for research funding.
It has been going through a major review since 2018 to reduce administrative burden and increase the transparency of its decision making. The new scheme was launched today. To be allowed to apply under the new scheme, the institution or department has to commit to the scheme principles: www.advance-he.ac.uk/equality-charters/athena-swan-charter/transformation/Updated-Athena-Swan-Charter-Principles
Principle 5 says:
Fostering collective understanding that individuals have the right to determine their own gender identity, and tackling the specific issues faced by trans and non-binary people because of their identity.
Gender identity is woven through the principles and the scheme guidance. In light of Maya’s ruling and the Reindorf report, is Advance HE (the body that run the scheme) on shaky ground in requiring adherence to gender ideology to apply to this scheme? It doesn’t look like they’ve considered recent developments at all.