By Stephanie Shakaa
Every year on February 11, the world celebrates the International Day of Women and Girls in Science, established by the UN in 2015 to recognize the critical role of women in STEM and confront persistent gender gaps in research, leadership, and innovation worldwide.
STEM,science, technology, engineering, and mathematics is more than subjects in school,it is the engine of innovation, the backbone of discovery, and the map to our collective future.
I still remember the sharp scent of acetone and the clean clink of glassware the first time I stepped into a university laboratory at sixteen. It felt like entering a cathedral of curiosity. One afternoon, absorbed in an organic synthesis experiment that refused to behave, a senior PhD student paused beside me and said quietly, “Most girls don’t stay past their first year here.” I did not know whether to feel embarrassed or enraged. But I knew one thing with unsettling clarity. I was not leaving.
Across the world today, fewer than one in three researchers is a woman. Women account for roughly thirty-three percent of the global research workforce, and their presence shrinks further in engineering, artificial intelligence, and high-technology fields. In sub-Saharan Africa, the proportion hovers around thirty-two percent. These are not just numbers. They are laboratories half-occupied, innovations unrealized, and discoveries delayed.
This is not a pipeline problem. It is a permission problem.
The periodic table does not recognize gender. Equations do not bend toward patriarchy. Molecules do not discriminate. Scientific truth is neutral. Access to it is not.
From childhood, girls are often praised for neatness rather than curiosity, for compliance rather than experimentation. A boy dismantles a device and is called brilliant. A girl does the same and is cautioned about being troublesome. These small signals accumulate. By the time subject choices are made, the boundaries have already been drawn. Physics becomes intimidating. Engineering becomes “too hard.” Technology becomes male territory long before talent has a chance to speak.
But exclusion is not just unfair. It is expensive.
The economic cost of sidelining women in science is not symbolic, it is measurable. The World Bank estimates that countries lose trillions of dollars in lifetime productivity and wealth due to gender gaps in earnings and labor participation. In innovation-driven sectors, nations with higher female participation in STEM consistently rank stronger on global innovation indices and patent output. When women are excluded from high-skill scientific fields, GDP does not merely stagnate it contracts in possibility.
The global economy loses an estimated $160 trillion in human capital wealth because of lifetime gender earnings gaps. That loss is not abstract. It is laboratories not built, patents not filed, technologies not invented. When women are absent from STEM, national income does not simply suffer it forfeits its future.
No nation grows by shrinking its intellectual base. No country industrializes by sidelining half its cognitive capacity. When women are underrepresented in science, research becomes narrower. Medical studies skew male. Artificial intelligence absorbs biased datasets. Climate adaptation policies ignore the insights of women who form the backbone of agricultural systems across this continent. The result is not only injustice. It is inefficiency.
In that laboratory at sixteen, I learned more than reaction mechanisms. I learned what it means to insist on space. I learned to request equipment time without apology. I learned to ask questions even when the room hesitated. I learned that competence, for women in science, must often be claimed before it is granted. And every small breakthrough under those fluorescent lights felt like quiet resistance against a narrative that suggested I was temporary.
We must move beyond celebration. Beyond hashtags. Beyond symbolic applause.
Inspiration without infrastructure becomes performance. If we are serious about the future of this continent, then scholarships must deliberately reach girls in physics and engineering. Research funding must close gender gaps instead of reproducing them. Laboratories must be inclusive not in rhetoric but in leadership. Mentorship must be institutional, not accidental. Early exposure to coding, robotics, and advanced mathematics must happen before stereotypes calcify.
Africa is the youngest continent in the world, standing at the threshold of artificial intelligence, renewable energy transitions, biotechnology, and advanced manufacturing. We speak daily about innovation, competitiveness, and technological sovereignty. Yet we cannot achieve any of these ambitions while asking half our population to stand at the margins of discovery.
You cannot solve climate change with half your scientists. You cannot build ethical AI with half your perspectives. You cannot industrialize with half your engineers.
A society that excludes its daughters from science is not protecting tradition. It is sabotaging progress.
On this International Day of Women and Girls in Science, let us resist the comfort of celebration and choose the discomfort of accountability. Let us demand measurable targets. Let us examine funding patterns. Let us track leadership representation. Let us treat the absence of women in laboratories not as a sentimental concern but as a structural weakness in our development model.
Because science is not a favor extended to women. It is a right.
And Africa cannot innovate on half a brain.
The future will not wait.
Talent is evenly distributed. Opportunity is not.
When you deny a girl access to science, you are not protecting culture you are weakening the country.
Every laboratory that excludes women is a nation negotiating against its own future.
A country that sidelines its daughters in science is conducting an experiment in decline.
I stayed in that laboratory. Many girls did not. The question is no longer whether girls can endure science. The question is whether our systems can survive without them.
The real risk is not that girls will fail science. The real risk is that science will fail Africa if it continues to exclude them.
History will not ask whether we celebrated women in science. It will ask whether we funded them.
Stephanie Shaakaa can be emailed via shaakaastephanie@yahoo.com