GAGE is a platform for searching for female scientists from specific research area or location.
- Sexism in the academy -by Troy Vettese (published in 2019)
- Outperforming yet undervalued: Undergraduate women in STEM -by Brittany Bloodhart et. al. (published in 2020)
- Gender disparities in colloquium speakers at top universities – by Christine L. Nittrouer et.al. (published in 2017)
- Nepotism and sexism in peer-review – by Christine Wennerås and Agnes Wold (published in 1997)
- Quality of evidence revealing subtle gender biases in science is in the eye of the beholder – by lan M. Handley et. al. (published in 2015)
- A machine learning approach to quantify gender bias in collaboration practices of mathematicians – by Christian Steinfeldt and Helena Mihaljevic (published in 2023)
- The Paradox of Meritocracy in Organizations – by Emilio J. Castilla and Stephen Benard (published in 2010)
Some guidelines
Guidelines for avoiding gender bias in reference writing – by the University of Arizona
Guidelines for avoiding bias – by Walden University
Women in science history
- The University of Halle has a webpage that showcases many amazing scientists from the history.
* We would like to thank Chloé-Agathe Azencott, Gudrun Thäter, Celeste Labedz and Ralf Köhl for referring to the resources.