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Gender, Language, and Income Biases Restrict Contributions to English-Language Scientific Journals

September 18, 2025
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A groundbreaking study published in the open-access journal PLOS Biology has laid bare the stark disparities in scientific productivity linked to gender, language proficiency, and economic background. Conducted by Tatsuya Amano of The University of Queensland alongside an international team, this research meticulously quantifies how systemic barriers disproportionately suppress the scientific output of women, non-native English speakers, and researchers hailing from lower-income countries. The findings provoke urgent reflection on the pervasive inequities embedded within the current academic publishing ecosystem, exposing a deeply entrenched productivity gap that is too often obscured or misunderstood.

At the heart of this inquiry lies the reliance on English-language publications as a primary metric of scientific productivity. English’s dominance in academia commands profound influence over a researcher’s visibility and credibility, yet such dominance inadvertently marginalizes those whose first language is not English. Amano’s study robustly demonstrates that gender and economic factors intersect with linguistic challenges to compound the underrepresentation of certain groups in global science. Specifically, women who are native English speakers from high-income countries published 45% fewer English-language peer-reviewed papers than their male counterparts, highlighting persistent gendered obstacles even within advantaged demographics.

The impact becomes even more pronounced when language and economic variables converge. Women who are non-native English speakers and originate from high-income countries published 60% fewer English-language papers compared to men who are native speakers from affluent nations. This gap escalates drastically when considering women non-native speakers from lower-middle-income countries, who produced 70% fewer English-language peer-reviewed articles. These statistics unveil a triad of systemic challenges: linguistic barriers that hinder manuscript acceptance, economic constraints that limit access to resources and support, and gendered biases that restrict professional advancement.

To capture these nuanced dynamics, Amano surveyed 908 environmental scientists across a spectrum of career stages and eight diverse nationalities, including Bangladeshi, Bolivian, British, Japanese, Nepali, Nigerian, Spanish, and Ukrainian researchers. This extensive dataset offered a panoramic view of global scientific productivity and permitted cross-comparisons that underscore the compounded nature of discrimination in academia. Notably, the researchers assessed total publication output not only in English but also in native languages, allowing a more equitable appraisal of scholarly contributions.

Strikingly, when non-English publications were factored in, the productivity pattern shifted. Non-native English-speaking scientists at early to mid-career stages actually surpassed their native English-speaking peers in total publications, suggesting that these researchers are highly active but often overlooked within traditional English-centric evaluation frameworks. Similarly, scientists from lower-income countries, when considering all languages, demonstrated greater overall publication numbers than those from wealthier nations. However, despite this surge, women persistently lagged behind men in total output, which points to deeply ingrained gender inequities that transcend linguistic and economic boundaries.

These findings challenge long-held assumptions that publication volume equates directly to scientific productivity or excellence. The researchers caution against simplistic interpretations that might wrongly position women, non-native English speakers, and those from economically disadvantaged backgrounds as inherently less productive scientists. Instead, the disparities are symptomatic of structural inequities that limit equitable participation in the scientific enterprise. Language-related manuscript rejection rates provide a telling example: non-native English speakers face rejection up to 2.6 times more frequently due to linguistic issues, a barrier that is inextricably linked to career progression and visibility.

The study also reveals the critical role of career stage in these disparities. Early-career women were identified as especially affected, publishing substantially fewer English-language papers than their male counterparts. This early deficit likely sets off a cascade effect, restricting access to funding, tenure-track positions, and leadership roles that hinge on a robust publication record. It also underscores the myriad challenges of balancing systemic biases alongside the demanding pressures of launching and sustaining a scientific career under unequal conditions.

International organizations such as UNESCO advocate for open science principles, including equitable access and contribution for all scientists regardless of origin or circumstance. Yet, Amano’s study concretely shows that the reality remains far from this ideal. The dominance of English as the de facto lingua franca in science not only privileges native speakers but also masks the rich reservoir of knowledge produced in other languages. As a growing body of literature calls for, integrating non-English publications into academic assessments could dismantle some of these entrenched barriers.

Addressing economic disparities is equally urgent. Scientists from lower-income countries typically receive less funding, limiting their capacity to conduct high-impact research, attend international conferences, or access publication support services. These limitations exacerbate the “productivity gap” that Amano’s team documents, further institutionalizing inequality in the global scientific landscape. Effective interventions must therefore strategically target both monetary and linguistic obstacles to foster a more level playing field.

Importantly, this research refuses to treat these inequalities as isolated factors. Instead, it highlights the intersectionality of gender, language, and economic status in shaping scientific careers. The cumulative effect of these overlapping disadvantages produces outsized impacts on underrepresented groups, demanding systemic reform rather than piecemeal adjustments. The study calls on institutions, publishers, and funding bodies to re-examine evaluation criteria, promote inclusive language policies, and prioritize equitable support mechanisms.

The implications extend beyond individual career trajectories, touching on the broader quality and diversity of scientific inquiry. Homogeneity in the scientific community constrains innovation and perpetuates biases in research questions, methodologies, and interpretations. By enabling full participation from diverse scientists around the world, the scientific enterprise can enrich its perspectives, challenge dominant paradigms, and generate knowledge that is more globally relevant and equitable.

Ultimately, Amano and colleagues implore stakeholders to rethink how scientific productivity is measured and valued, emphasizing that reliance on English-language publications alone obscures a significant portion of scholarly contributions. Systemic changes are essential to dismantle barriers and close the productivity gap. This involves not only recognizing non-English outputs but also actively supporting linguistic diversity and economic inclusivity within science.

This pivotal study amplifies a critical call to action: to transform science into an arena where talent, creativity, and expertise flourish unfettered by language, gender, or economic background. As global challenges demand collaborative and diverse scientific responses, equity in productivity is not merely a matter of fairness but a prerequisite for scientific progress.


Subject of Research: Disparities in scientific productivity influenced by gender, language proficiency, and economic background.

Article Title: Language, economic and gender disparities widen the scientific productivity gap.

News Publication Date: September 18, 2025

Web References:

  • DOI link to article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003372
  • UNESCO Open Science principles: https://www.unesco.org/en/open-science/about

References:
Amano T, Ramírez-Castañeda V, Berdejo-Espinola V, Borokini I, Chowdhury S, Golivets M, et al. (2025) Language, economic and gender disparities widen the scientific productivity gap. PLoS Biol 23(8): e3003372.

Image Credits: Tatsuya Amano (CC-BY 4.0)

Keywords: scientific productivity gap, gender disparities, language bias, non-native English speakers, economic inequality, publication bias, academic publishing, environmental scientists, systemic barriers, global science inequity, open science, multilingual scholarship

Tags: academic publishing and gender disparitieschallenges for non-native English speakers in academiaeconomic disparities in research outputEnglish-language dominance in researchgender and income intersectionality in researchgender bias in scientific publishingimpact of language on scientific credibilityinequities in global science publishinglanguage proficiency and academic visibilityproductivity gap in scientific contributionssystemic barriers in academic publishingunderrepresentation of women in science
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