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Article

Gender Gaps and the Gender Parity Index in Research in a Colombian Region

by
Isabel Cristina Rivera-Lozada
1,*,
César Antonio Bonilla-Asalde
2,* and
Oriana Rivera-Lozada
3,*
1
Departamento de Economía, Universidad del Cauca, Popayán 190001, Colombia
2
Escuela de Posgrado, Universidad Señor Sipán, Chiclayo 14000, Peru
3
Vicerrectorado de Investigación, Universidad Señor de Sipán, Chiclayo 14000, Peru
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(6), 333; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14060333
Submission received: 19 March 2025 / Revised: 15 May 2025 / Accepted: 16 May 2025 / Published: 27 May 2025
(This article belongs to the Section Gender Studies)

Abstract

:
Given the difficulty of measuring gender gaps in STI research due to access to comparable information, this research aimed to measure the gender gap in research and the Gender Parity Index for the Department of Cauca, Colombia, in the calls for proposals for Minisciences 2013–2021. This approach is unique to date. The goal of the mixed-methods approach was to determine the gender parity index (GPI) and the gender gaps in research in four fundamental aspects: research area, level of training, classification of researchers, and age groups. The results of the measurement were contrasted with the perceptions obtained from a focus group composed of recognized researchers from the region. The triangulation of the information indicates that the gender gaps are high and the GPI is low, whereas the researchers do not perceive the existence of the gaps, a situation that is detected in the field of administrative management and the scarcity of financial resources for research.

1. Introduction

The economic growth of Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) in 2024 was 2.2%, and 2.4% is expected for 2025 because of low economic activity and stagnation of international GDP (ECLAC 2024). This provides a scenario for science, technology, and research (STI) to play an important role in the socioeconomic development of the region, particularly if the gender gap in STI is reduced, which in LAC is 30% (World Economic Forum 2017; López-Bassols et al. 2018). The Global Gender Gap Report (World Economic Forum 2023) indicates that it will take the region 67 years to achieve gender parity, which is 72.6%, and in the case of Colombia, it is 71% in 2022, which is lower in relation to the previous year, which was 72%, but it went from occupying position 59 to 75 in the ranking that considers 155 countries (Datosmacro 2023). In Colombia, 39% of the researchers recognized by the Ministry of Science, Technology, and Innovation (Minciencias 2021) are women, 51% (4314) have doctoral training, and 67% are recognized as junior researchers. In Cauca, a department in southwestern Colombia that contributes 1.76% of the national GDP (DANE 2023) and is directly affected by armed conflict (Colprensa 2023), 1.56% of the country’s researchers and female researchers constitute 37% of the total (Minciencias 2021).
The difficulty in measuring gender gaps in STIs, especially in research, has been recognized (Rivera-Lozada et al. 2023; Monroy 2019; Tacsir et al. 2014); specifically, accessing international comparability information is difficult. Despite this, this research aimed to measure the dimension of the gender gap in research, as well as the Gender Parity Index for the Department of Cauca, Colombia, in the period of 2013–2021 to demonstrate the research situation regarding the achievement of gender parity and the closing of gaps, as well as accurate information for public policy-makers to make relevant decisions and propose the necessary interventions to achieve this Sustainable Development Goal as well as regional socioeconomic development.
The proposed objective places this research within the framework of faith-based institutionalism, which analyzes how institutions—understood as formal rules; social norms; and organizational structures—reproduce and perpetuate gender inequalities within their operational frameworks (Mackay et al. 2010). This perspective considers that gender gaps are not spontaneous or merely cultural phenomena but are deeply rooted in institutional practices and structures.
In the field of scientific research, this approach makes it possible to identify how public policies, funding systems, and research calls for proposals can operate unequally in relation to women’s participation. In this sense, the analysis of the Minciencias programs between 2013 and 2021, oriented to calculate the gender gap and the Gender Parity Index in the Department of Cauca, is clearly inscribed in this theoretical current by studying the structural inequalities present in the Colombian science and technology system.
In the context of Cauca, the collection and analysis of data from 2013 to 2021 allows observing trends in the participation of women in research, supported by empirical and quantitative feminism that makes gender inequalities visible using statistical data and measurable evidence. Through indicators such as the Gender Parity Index (GPI), the Relative Participation Rate, or the Gender Equality Measure (GEM), this approach seeks to support with empirical evidence the demands for equity and informed public policies (Bacchi 2010).

2. Materials and Methods

A mixed quantitative and qualitative approach was used for this research. The quantitative component consisted of the gender parity index (GPI) and the gender gaps of researchers in the Department of Cauca in terms of research area, level of training, classification of researchers, and age groups.
The information was extracted from the database of the free platform MinCiencias https://minciencias.gov.co/la-ciencia-en-cifras/, accessed on 2 March 2023, where the information of the Department of Cauca (Pacific region) and the data of the researchers in the calls for the years 2013–2015, 2017, 2019, and 2021 are all available. The data obtained offered information on the research area, specialty area, classification, level of training, age, region, place of birth, place of residence, and institution, among others.
The study population consisted of 1024 researchers classified in the calls of MinCiencias in the Department of Cauca during the years 2013–2021 (2013: 109; 2014: 89; 2015: 116; 2017: 153; 2019: 227; 2021: 330). The information was collected in Microsoft® Excel® for Microsoft 365 MSO (version 2310 compilation 16.0.16924.20054) of 64 bits, analyzed in SPSS software version 21.0, and available in the open access repository ZENODO (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10287705, accessed on 30 June 2023).
The descriptive analysis of the data included frequencies and the gender parity index (GPI) to evaluate gender differences in the sciences (natural, engineering and technology, medical and health, agricultural, social, and humanities), the level of training (undergraduate, medical specialty, specialization, master’s degree, doctorate, and postdoctorate), and the classification of researchers (junior, associate, senior, and emeritus). The GPI was obtained by dividing the value of an indicator for women by that for men (Koronkiewicz 2017).
GPI = indicator value women/indicator value men
A value less than one (1) indicates differences in favor of men, whereas a value close to one (1) indicates that parity has been reached. A value greater than one (1) indicates differences in favor of women.
Likewise, the gender gap was calculated by adjusting the formula proposed for the effective wage gap (Angulo 2022); for this purpose, the difference in the values of men and women was calculated, and the figure was divided by the value of men. The result is multiplied by one hundred and is the percentage known as the gender gap.
Gender gap = (indicator value men − indicator value women)/indicator value men
The goal of the qualitative component of the research was to contrast the perceptions of researchers from Cauca regarding the limitations to achieving gender parity and gender gaps in research in the department. For this purpose, a semistructured interview was conducted with six researchers—three women (M1, M2, M3) and three men (H1, H2, H3)—all from the public university of the region and with high-quality accreditation, doctorates, and research experience.
This study was approved by the ethics committee. The participants in this study provided informed consent, and their identities were anonymous so that their integrity was not violated.

3. Results

3.1. Gender Gap and Gender Parity Index in Research in the Department of Cauca, 2013–2021

3.1.1. Sciences

In Colombia, the Ministry of Science classifies scientific areas in accordance with the provisions of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in natural sciences, engineering and technology, medical and health sciences, agricultural sciences, social sciences, and humanities (OECD 2007).
The results indicate that the medical and health sciences are the area that is closest to parity (0.87), closely followed by the social sciences (0.75); however, curiously, the humanities (0.18) and engineering and technology (0.32) are the ones that present the lowest parity on average, that is, fewer women researchers in the calls for the study period 2013–2021. With respect to the gender gap, the humanities have the largest gap (81.58%), followed by engineering and technology (67.7%); the smallest gap is in medical and health sciences (13.33%), accompanied by social sciences (25.19%), which is consistent with the GPI (Table 1). Associating Natural Sciences with Engineering and Technology, we can approximate the gender gaps in research in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) in the Department of Cauca, where the results indicate a gap of 55.64% and a GPI of 0.44.
In the case of natural sciences, there was a greater number of male researchers in all calls, which is consistent with the gender gap for the period, 43.58%, and the GPI of 0.56 (Table 1).
In engineering and technology, the gender gap in the 2013 call was 78.95% and was attenuated at the end of the calls when it was 57.87%, below the national gap in electronic engineering, 73% (Figueroa Vergara et al. 2023). During this period, the GPI was 0.32, and the gender gap was the second highest, at 67.7%.
Regarding medical and health sciences, the figures indicate that in the first call (2013), there was no gender gap in participation in research. During the subsequent eight years, the number of female researchers exceeded their male counterparts by 12 points, a situation that can be explained by the greater number of women who practice in this field of knowledge, as well as the greater collaborative participation in research, a situation that is reflected in the gender gap that is 13.33%, the lowest of the sciences classified for this analysis, and the highest GPI of 0.87.
In the first call for the classification of researchers (2013), the number of female researchers in agricultural sciences in the department of Cauca had a ratio of 2:1 with respect to male researchers, a situation that was quickly lost in the two following calls (2014 and 2015), as the number of researchers remained constant and one researcher lost classification in the 2017 call. Thus, in the last calls (2018 and 2021), there was an increase in the number of researchers that was insufficient to reduce the gap between researchers in agricultural sciences, which was 42.86%, and the GPI (0.57).
The area of social sciences has drawn attention because it has the second-lowest gap, 24.19%, and the highest GPI, 0.75, in a field of knowledge that historically has higher female participation, although with male authority (Gaceta UNAM 2021). Despite having a zero gap in the 2014 call, the growth trend in the number of researchers did not manage to reduce the gap that was accentuated in the last call.
In the field of humanities, the absence of female researchers is significant; in three periods (2014, 2015, and 2017), there were no female researchers registered, leading to this being the field of knowledge with the greatest gender gap in Cauca, with 81.58% and the lowest GPI, 0.18, a situation that contrasts with the number of women in the humanities, which in Colombia corresponds to 74.5% of the total number of researchers in this field (LEE 2023).

3.1.2. Researchers’ Classification According to Minciencias

MinCiencias classifies researchers into four categories: junior, associate, senior, and emeritus. Cauca represented 1.56% of the national researchers. In the junior category, there is the greatest number of researchers and therefore the lowest gender gap, 32%, and the highest gender parity index (0.68) (Table 2).
The results show that in the Emeritus researcher classification, the gender gap is 0% because the GPI is 1 because there are equal numbers of male and female emeritus researchers in Cauca (Table 2).
With respect to the associated research classification, despite the growing trend in the number of researchers, the gender gap is 71.77%, and the GPI is low (0.28), considering that there is greater participation of researchers in this category.
The senior researcher classification has low participation in Cauca, and the first three calls lack registration for researchers, which is reflected in a large gap of 92.59% and a low GPI (0.07) (Table 2).
The highest investigative classification, Emeritus, lacks the participation of both men and women during the period 2013–2015, a situation that changes in the year 2017 and that registers the participation of a female researcher who disappears a year later to appear again in the last call of the year 2021 next to a researcher, a situation that explains the result of total parity (GPI: 2) and a gender gap of 100% favorable for male researchers (Table 2).

3.1.3. Training Level

MinCiencias classifies the level of training into seven categories: other, undergraduate, medical specialty, specialization, master’s degree, doctorate, and postdoctoral studies. The Department of Cauca does not register researchers in the other category, and the highest gender gap (82.76%), accompanied by the lowest GPI (0.17), is found in the medical specialty category, and the highest GPI (0.88), with the lowest gender gap of 12.5%, is found in the group of researchers with a specialization level of training (Table 3).

3.1.4. Age Group

Five age groups—20–29, 30–39, 40–49, 50–59, and 60–69—were analyzed. Across all analyzed calls, there were few recognized researchers in the youngest range of 20–39 years, as well as in the highest range of 60–69 years. The largest gender gap, 74.51%, and the lowest GPI, 0.25, were in the age range of 60–69, in contrast to the smallest gender gap, 15%, and the highest GPI, 0.8, which were in the youngest range of 20–29 (Table 4).
The results show that the youngest group, 20–29, did not exceed ten researchers, as was the case with the 60–69 range. During the 2013–2015 period, the most representative age range among the researchers was 40–49 years, a range where the gender gap was 61.25% and the GPI was 0.37.

3.2. Perception of the Gender Gap, Voices

In contrast to the gender gap and the calculated GPI, the researchers interviewed do not perceive the existence of a gender gap in the research or in the field in which they operate. The interviewees were hermetic on the subject, and when questioned, the H1 researcher stated about his latest research, “this last one […] we did it with almost 30 teachers, there was a high participation of teachers and monitors, I do not remember exactly the figure, but I think it was predominantly women, for example, here in the department, the only man was me”.
For her part, researcher M1 did not hesitate to affirm that “I have not felt it, I am in the research group for rural development, we could say that, at present, there is an almost equal proportion of men and women”; however, she stated that it was always like this, noting, “when I entered, the majority were men, I was almost the only woman, but as time has passed, the number of women in the group has increased and there is still no gender discrimination for the projects”. This is not surprising because the participation of women in research increases with each call, although in a lower proportion than that of men researchers (Minciencias 2021).
Researchers H2 and H3 perceived the existence of inequality in research, especially in the field in which they operate. H3 stated, “No, in our faculty, there are many fewer women doing research, but it comes from the discipline. If one analyzes the number of women versus men historically (…) in fact, in this semester it is curious, because I am thirty-five, there are only two women”, evidencing the recognition of male predominance. H2 expressed, “Well, it is a tradition, right? “The system is terribly androcentric. (…) If you take a historical tour, you will see that when women come to the surface, it is not because they were not there; it is not because they had not been thinking that they had not been studying at the University but because it was an official policy of invisibility”. (…) It is a tradition that still costs a lot. It costs a lot because if it is not for quota laws and quota requirements, for compensatory measures, women would not be recognized yet”.
Most of the researchers were more hermetic on the subject; this perception highlights queen bee syndrome, where women are opposed to feminist movements and consider that professional success is due to their own effort and merit and not to the societal system, which leads them to surround themselves with men (Staines et al. 1974). M2 had a similar perception, affirming, “we were like equal. (…) There it is balanced. (…) Although yes, one can see many, many women leading research projects ”; however, M1 stated that it was not always like this “when I entered, the majority were men, I was almost the only woman, but to the extent time has passed, the number of women in the group has increased and there is still no gender discrimination for the projects ”, This is an expected outcome, considering that the participation of women in research has shown a consistent upward trend in each call for proposals, though it still lags behind the growth rate observed among male researchers (Minciencias 2021). Only one of the researchers interviewed perceived the gender gap: M3 stated, “In research, creation, hey, I feel that in this field, the university is much more patriarchal, right? And as research is done within the university, because there are fewer researchers because there are fewer women, in my view, within the alma mater”.
Researchers agreed that they did not perceive gender differences associated with discrimination, but when asked about aspects of the reconciliation between research processes and family life, opinions diverged between men and women. Researcher M1 pointed out how the care of her child in childhood impacted her work development: “When my child was small, that affected me a lot because it took time away from my child so sometimes I had to take him to the field on a Saturday and it is not that he really likes what his mother does for work; then both he and I because I said that he had to do something that he does not like […] I had to work much more at night and less on the weekend in graduate work and research, to be able to dedicate more time to him”.
M2 expressed, “I am the mother of an 11-year-old boy. So, when I started my doctorate, he was noticeably young. […] I had a pandemic doing my doctorate. It was so hard, because my son in class was young, looking out for him. So, for me it is a thing that must be balanced. But it is not easy, it does not seem easy to me. Like to say, well, this is my time to investigate”. Researcher M3 did not discuss this aspect of her life in detail.
Researcher H1 acknowledged that, as a man, he did not face many difficulties due to the traditional division of roles in patriarchal society, noting, “my productivity at this moment is on the rise, again, but it was impossible ten years and more if we are talking of women, as we are in patriarchal societies, so many of the household tasks are assigned to women only because they are women, men are not, so men in that situation can still investigate more than women; for example, women have to breastfeed, men don’t, so we don’t have to dedicate time to that task, so men, even though we are with young children, have an advantage over our partner”.
Her voice draws attention to the aspects of reconciliation between work and family life, especially in aspects related to care that people resolve differently. In the case of women, the voice of researcher M1 spoke of sacrificing time, both leisure and work, to address maternal responsibilities to the detriment of research productivity; this affected her professional development. However, now that her son is an adult, she has more time and can make progress in her research, as she noted, “but now that he is an adult, on the contrary, research becomes a better entertainment, because I am dedicated 100% to the university, let us say, […], sometimes a week It is difficult for me to visit the fieldwork of a student so I do it on a Saturday, I have no problem with that”. Faced with the same situation, Researcher H1 realized the greater flexibility of his schedule to allocate it to the investigation: “On my normal days, I am finishing at 9 at night and I have started, I have class at 7 am, then we are talking approximately 12, 14 h a day, well removing the noon break”, a situation that highlighted contrasts with his counterparts through the recognition of the additional challenges that women researchers face.
H3 recounted details of his investigative process compared with that of his ex-wife: “My ex is also a researcher, a professor at the university. […] Obviously, then, because she was the mother, then obviously she had to sacrifice much more than me. […] But there is always a recrimination because I could do more things than she. So, I could travel, they accepted articles, and she did not. […] I think it is more training, because obviously, well, in the care of our son, we were both, but the decision was, for example, […] the opportunity arose to go to Germany then, she decided to finish his doctorate in a virtual way and I as if I could be in Germany so I could have better conditions to develop my doctorate (…) in fact, he once told me, as he always felt under my shadow ”. H2 stated, “Well, starting, no, then yes, it is more difficult for parents, in adolescence. For mothers more in childhood, because we are busy at the end of the social life of boys, there are always many parties, friends, outings, and trips, which is their social life; it ends up reducing the intellectual life of us”.
H3 also explained that the extra time that he dedicates to research “generally always exceeds that dedication of 40 h, especially for activities that are in favor of the projects that are had, for example, formulating a project, because I do not have within my work time for that, so, well, I dedicate extra time for that”. H2 confirmed that “the morning (it is outside of my working day, I work in the night shift) is for the second manifestation that I was telling you, the products we make without the academic hour, right? That it has to do with reflections, with some book projects that we do with groups from other countries or from here”, this situation implies an availability of time that does not take into account the time of women researchers to attend to the tasks of caregiving, which, due to cultural effects in some cases or historical effects in others, are mainly the responsibility of women.
Regarding the difficulties identified in investigating, Researcher M1 referred to those related to public order to conduct fieldwork. Notably, the Department of Cauca is a territory in Colombia with a greater presence of various armed actors, so the researcher states that “the first difficulty is public order because I have worked in areas with difficult public order; we work in the municipality of Tambo, close to the capital, where there are various armed actors: guerrillas and paramilitaries”. This situation affects people, but not in the same way; women are more vulnerable, and their security is more exposed.
For researcher H1, the main difficulty for the exercise of research is the limitation of financial resources: “people have to work for free or there are resources to pay for work but also for economic stimuli and those economic stimuli do not reach the professors, so we practically do research for free”. H3 agreed: “In general, I would say funding. Funding can be sought, but it is difficult, it involves a lot of work to find resources”. H2 mentioned that the main difficulty is the predominant interest of institutions in some disciplines more than others: “there is a disdain and a kind of mistreatment towards the human and social sciences, the arts and some expressions that are not very conventional within the profession, such as accounting”.
The group of researchers denounced the same difficulties related to the administrative management of research projects. M1 expresses that “the other serious problem and that is the reason why I did not return to lead projects where the university is the one that manages the budget, it is the administrative management with the university, it is very cumbersome, […], there is a lot of bureaucracy, I understand that there must be a transparent management of resources, but sometimes it becomes like a chore to not be able to do the processes”.
M2 supported the above: “Let us say, look, the legalization part. Because one wants to do, for example, investigations, but until the entire process of the vice-rectory is complete, it is as if it did not exist”. Moreover, M3 noted, “Difficulty in which I tell you, the part of resources is not easy to obtain and for investigating in the field requires a lot of resources”. This is tied to GDP (López-Aguirre and Farías 2022).

4. Discussion

In Latin America and the Caribbean, the participation of women in research ranges between 30% and 60% (López-Bassols et al. 2018), a situation that is consistent with the results found for the Department of Cauca, Colombia, which has a gap of gender in the investigation of 45.7%. The gender gap in research in the field of medical and health sciences is the lowest, at 13.3%, in accordance with their high degree of participation in this field (López-Bassols et al. 2018; Monroy 2019). The results indicate that in Cauca, the gender gap in STEM is 55.64%, despite the higher proportion of female graduates in science, 56.3%, offset by the lower number of graduates in technology careers, 20.3% (LEE 2023). With respect to engineering and technology, the gap is greater than that with STEM, at 67.7%, which highlights the discipline with the greatest degree of gender asymmetry.
In the field of social sciences, the results show a gender gap of 25.19%, which may reflect the significant participation of women in this field (Gaceta UNAM 2021) but contrasts with the greater gap in the field of humanities, with 81.58% of women being more underrepresented. With respect to the field of agricultural sciences, the situation of the GPI of 0.57 shows greater gender parity in research in this science despite the greater roots in gender stereotypes in this sector (DANE 2020).
This study also examines the classification of researchers in Colombia according to MinCiencias. In Cauca, there is a growing trend in the number of researchers who apply to be classified; therefore, the highest GPI in the classification of researchers is in the junior category, a situation that reflects the greater incursion of women in research in contrast with the low percentage of female researchers in the world, 28% (UNESCO 2019). With respect to the senior classification, the number of researchers classified in the calls was low, which explains the large gap, 92.59%, indicative of the progressive and recent incursion of the researchers in the classification processes that are still opening trials (González García 2017; Ortmann 2015).
Despite the significant academic offerings of the country in terms of postgraduate degrees (Gutierrez Ossa et al. 2019), the gender gap in the level of training of Cauca researchers is far from closed, at 45.71%. In the case of medical specialties, the gaps are significantly greater, at 82.76%, in a disciplinary field with a greater number of women.
The gender gap in research in Cauca in terms of sciences is 45.71%, according to the classification of researchers (49.2%), by the level of training (49.6%), and by the age group (43.11%), which is quite high in terms of consideration of the 5% reference to assess gaps in Ibero-America and is within the framework of the most accentuated national gaps in the region (Albornoz et al. 2018).
Despite the gender gap in high research and low GPI, the researchers interviewed did not immediately perceive it as a concern. It was necessary to ask specific questions so that differential difficulties due to gender for research performance emerged. Moreover, they coincided in pointing out the precarious administrative management needed to support investigative work. In this regard, the impact is surely different and greater for researchers who lack time, although this research did not seek to confirm this situation because it exceeded the scope of this research.
The results indicate that sexism and gender inequality need to be made visible in the research community as part of the actions that contribute to closing gaps, as well as measures aimed at reconciling professional and family life (Ordorika 2015; Peru Domínguez 2021) that enable female researchers to increase scientific productivity, as stated by the interviewees, and to shorten the productivity gaps with their male counterparts (Araneda-Guirriman et al. 2023).
The limitation of the present study is the methodological design of the quantitative component, which did not allow us to observe causal relationships. Despite this, the research met the objective of measuring the gender gap in research, as well as the gender parity index in the region of interest, which provides evidence for subsequent studies that deepen and broaden the subject.

5. Conclusions

The gender gap in research in the Department of Cauca is high both in various disciplines and in the level of training, research classification, and age groups, a situation that is also reflected in the Gender Parity Index, which is low. In the medical and health sciences, these indicators present better results because of the high participation of women in this discipline. Despite the above, the high participation of women professionals in the humanities has not yet reached gender parity.
In the field of STEM, gender parity is still far from being reached, particularly in the component related to engineering and technology, which increases the gap; however, there is a regional academic offer of training programs in this field.
There is a growing trend in the number of women researchers in the last calls, which is reflected in the GPI of the junior classification, which is high, whereas it is low in the Associate and Senior classifications. With respect to the level of training, gender gaps in research are more closely related at the level of specialization, perhaps because training requires less time for dedication with respect to the master’s, doctorate, and postdoctoral degrees, which allows for better reconciliation with care tasks, which are traditionally recharged by women.
Finally, the perceptions of the researchers interviewed indicate that the participation of women in research, gender parity, and the closing of gaps are not a problem on their agendas and that they only reflect on them when questioned about it. The most immediate concern considered by researchers is related to funding and management of research resources, leaving aside situations conditioned by social paradigms that maintain gender stereotypes in the field of research, as is the case of reconciling care and research, evidencing that they do not want to be associated with feminism and the limitations or barriers to research are found neutral and indifferent to the gender of the researcher.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, I.C.R.-L., C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Methodology, I.C.R.-L., C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Software, I.C.R.-L. and O.R.-L.; Validation, I.C.R.-L., C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Formal analysis, I.C.R.-L., C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Investigation, I.C.R.-L., C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Resources, I.C.R.-L., C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Data curation, I.C.R.-L., C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Writing—original draft, I.C.R.-L., C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Writing—review & editing, I.C.R.-L., C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Visualization, C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Supervision, C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Project administration, C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L.; Funding acquisition, C.A.B.-A. and O.R.-L. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The original data presented in the study are openly available at (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10287705, accessed on 15 May 2025).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Table 1. Gender Gap and Gender Parity Index in Sciences, Department of Cauca, 2013–2021.
Table 1. Gender Gap and Gender Parity Index in Sciences, Department of Cauca, 2013–2021.
SciencesGPIGap
Natural0.5643.58
Engineering and Technology0.3267.70 1
Medical and Health0.8713.33
Agricultural0.5742.86
Social0.7525.19
Humanities0.1881.58
STEAM0.4455.64
Total0.5445.71
1 STEM Componente.
Table 2. Gender gap and gender parity index in the classification of researchers from 2013 to 2021.
Table 2. Gender gap and gender parity index in the classification of researchers from 2013 to 2021.
ClassificationGPIGap
Junior0.6832.45
Associate0.2871.77
Senior0.0792.59
Emeritus2100.00
Total0.7674.20
Table 3. Gender gap and gender parity index at the level of training of researchers from 2013 to 2021.
Table 3. Gender gap and gender parity index at the level of training of researchers from 2013 to 2021.
Training LevelGPIGender Gap
Undergraduate0.550.00
Medical specialty0.1782.76
Specialization0.87512.50
Mastery0.7921.32
PhD0.3862.07
Postdoc0.3168.97
Total50%49.60
Table 4. Gender gap and gender parity index by age group in researchers from 2013 to 2021.
Table 4. Gender gap and gender parity index by age group in researchers from 2013 to 2021.
Age GroupGPIGender Gap
20–290.815.0
30–390.7323.73
40–490.3761.25
50–590.6041.09
60–690.2574.51
Total0.5543.11
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Rivera-Lozada, I.C.; Bonilla-Asalde, C.A.; Rivera-Lozada, O. Gender Gaps and the Gender Parity Index in Research in a Colombian Region. Soc. Sci. 2025, 14, 333. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14060333

AMA Style

Rivera-Lozada IC, Bonilla-Asalde CA, Rivera-Lozada O. Gender Gaps and the Gender Parity Index in Research in a Colombian Region. Social Sciences. 2025; 14(6):333. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14060333

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Rivera-Lozada, Isabel Cristina, César Antonio Bonilla-Asalde, and Oriana Rivera-Lozada. 2025. "Gender Gaps and the Gender Parity Index in Research in a Colombian Region" Social Sciences 14, no. 6: 333. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14060333

APA Style

Rivera-Lozada, I. C., Bonilla-Asalde, C. A., & Rivera-Lozada, O. (2025). Gender Gaps and the Gender Parity Index in Research in a Colombian Region. Social Sciences, 14(6), 333. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14060333

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