First article published in the JGSG Special Issue "Women in Geosciences"
- iapgeoethics
- Aug 1
- 2 min read
The Journal of Geoethics and Social Geoscience (JGSG) published a new open access article on 31 July 2025 in the Special Issue "Women in Geosciences" edited by Daniela Di Bucci, Luisa Sabato, and Martina Zucchi.
We remind you that this journal is diamond open access. No Article Processing Charge (APC) is requested to authors and no fee to readers.
The new article can be cited as follows:
Di Bucci, D., Franceschetti, C., and Postiglione, I. (2025). 30 years of women in science in Italy through the lens of the Major Risks Commission. Journal of Geoethics and Social Geosciences, 3(Special Issue), 1-15. https://doi.org/10.13127/jgsg-84
Abstract:
In Italy, the National Commission for the forecasting and prevention of the Major Risks is a technical-scientific advisory body of the Civil Protection Department. Its contributions are fundamental for implementing strategies for forecasting and preventing civil protection risks and for emergency management from a technical-scientific point of view. The Commission was officially established in 1992. Since then, it has continued to operate to this day, albeit with varying organisation and internal composition over time. The Commission has always been composed of high-level experts from various scientific disciplines related to the different risks addressed by civil protection. As such, it can be considered as an indicator for the gender balance within the scientific community engaged on disaster risk for over 30 years.
In this work, we analyse the number and gender distribution of the Commission’s members since its establishment, to investigate the absolute numbers, percentages and role played by women scientists over the considered period. For the last decade, we have compared our results with the most recent gender analysis for the Academia and Research Institutes, conducted by the National Agency for the Evaluation of the University and Research System (ANVUR). Our results show that, although the percentage of women in the Major Risks Commission is broadly in line with the Academia in Italy, this merely reflects a wider, persistent underrepresentation at senior levels. A general increase can be observed over time, but the growth is still limited. The reasons for this reduced female presence are also explored, together with some possible actions aimed at increasing the number of women in these contexts.
Keywords:
Gender balance, STEM careers, Disaster Risk Science, Civil Protection
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