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Saturday, January 18, 2025

Australian Space Agency takes one giant leap for womankind

The book Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus should probably read โ€œmen and women are from Earthโ€ because the Australian Space Agency has just committed to a diversity and inclusion statement for the space industry.

In an Australian first, such a commitment is essential when you look at history:  When the first female astronaut went into space for a week โ€“ NASA suggested she take 100 tampons. When the first all-female space-walk was announced, NASA had to cancel because there was only one space suit that would fit a woman.

ANU gender researcher Dr Elise Stephenson says Australiaโ€™s industry is growing rapidly, particularly in the ACT, and there is an opportunity to do it differently, โ€œto get it right from the startโ€.

โ€œThis new inclusion statement is pretty awesome to think about, not only creating a policy statement but also about what do we want the sector to look like in the future,โ€ Dr Stephenson says.

โ€œThe ACT is positioning itself to be a gateway, a national or international hub for the space sector. Although thereโ€™s this enormous opportunity, weโ€™re seeing a lot of inequality.

โ€œThe space sector doesnโ€™t just involve people who have STEM skills, itโ€™s an under-utilised opportunity. They need to get better at how they market opportunities and the pathways into the sector, such as more traineeships, on-the-job training, thinking about lateral transfer, re-skilling mothers returning to the workforce or changing careers.โ€

Itโ€™s worth remembering that if it wasnโ€™t for female mathematicians, the US might not have successfully sent people into space or to the moon and back.

โ€œWeโ€™ve got some big organisational issues that the space industry and government has to grapple with to ensure that their workforce is inclusive,โ€ Dr Stephenson says.

โ€œSpace hasnโ€™t been designed around women and If weโ€™re ever to settle future planets, thatโ€™s obviously a problem. To be able to sustainably reproduce humanity, we actually need all kinds of people from all kinds of backgrounds. We have a practical imperative in making sure everyoneโ€™s involved.โ€

Save the date: NASAโ€™s Christina Koch is set to become the first woman on the moon in late 2024.

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