Search

How can we help?

Icon

International Women’s Day 2023 – Empowerment of all women and girls in technology

International Women’s Day celebrates women’s achievements and aims for a world free of bias, stereotypes and discrimination.

The importance of IWD

International Women’s Day has become a platform for women to raise concerns relating to gender inequality and empowering women and girls. It seeks to raise awareness on gender inequalities as well as celebrating women’s achievements and progress.

The theme for this year’s International Women’s Day as set out by the UN, 8 March 2023 (IWD 2023) is, ‘DigitALL: Innovation and technology for gender equality’. The aim of the theme is to recognise and celebrate the contributions by women and girls towards technology and online education. The UN Observance of IWD recognises and celebrates the women and girls who are championing the advancement of transformative technology and digital education. It will involve exploring the impact of the digital gender gap on widening economic and social inequalities. Women make up less than one-third of the STEM workforce and are severely underrepresented in the STEM field in a male-dominated industry. Although we strive to create a world which is diverse and inclusive, there needs to be an attitudinal shift that gender equity is paramount to achieve this.

Awareness needs to be supported by action

Research by Engineering UK has found that 73% of 11-14-year-olds do not know what engineers do, which suggests a contributory factor for the shortages in STEM roles. This means that we need more diverse role models to inspire a wider pool of talent.

Change starts at the top and organisations’ management teams should firstly be ensuring that examples of gender equity are being set.  For example, this could involve encouraging more women to pursue a career in the STEM industry or striving to have more females in management roles. It is visible, diverse female role models, rather than historical figures, which will encourage gender equality.

In addition to this, if stereotypes are going to be challenged, educators, businesses and individual mindsets must be broadened regarding women’s participation in and contribution to innovation. From the earlier stages in education, there should be encouragement of coding and tech-related activities for girls and more female role models and mentors. In the workplace, it is key that organisations provide more flexible working for women, such as programmes to support women returners or better family-friendly policies, and monitor equality. If organisations are seeking to make pledges to aspire for gender equality, they should be sharing their diversity, equality and inclusion targets and steps being taken to meet those targets with their workforce.

From the earlier stages in education, there should be encouragement of coding and tech-related activities for girls and more female role models and mentors.

Addressing AI-driven discrimination

We are witnessing the rapid development of Artificial Intelligence (AI), where such algorithms can reflect human bias. AI has quickly established itself in people’s everyday lives and as the usage of such technology grows, it is important to tackle unfairness in these systems and the impact they have on the world.

An AI model is trained and tested by existing data which means that it will often reflect bias that is already present. Sophia Ignatidou, who works as Group Manager for AI and Data Science at the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) states, “If AI-driven discrimination is left unaddressed, we could end up shutting out the very people who are best placed to challenge it”. This means that anyone working with AI, from researchers to developers, engineers and data scientists must make it a priority to address this problem.

One of the key priorities of the ICO is to tackle AI-driven discrimination and as well as investigating concerns about the potential risks posed by the technology, the ICO has issued guidance and practical toolkits to educate AI developers on ensuring their algorithms treat people and their information fairly.

Overall, the key message here is in order to break down such gender-based discrimination, it is important that all genders are represented.

Happy International Women’s Day!

Disclaimer
This information is for guidance purposes only and should not be regarded as a substitute for taking legal advice. Please refer to the full General Notices on our website.

Author profile

About this article

Read, listen and watch our latest insights

art
  • 16 December 2025
  • Employment

Christmas Parties – Festive Fun or a New Year Hangover?

It’s Christmas party season! The office party is often a mixed blessing – an opportunity to boost morale and perhaps celebrate a successful year yet also a melting pot of workers letting their hair down, with potential for accidents, injuries, threats and claims.

art
  • 02 December 2025
  • Employment

All I Want for Christmas… Is No Tribunal Claims!

Before the festivities begin, it is worth unwrapping the key risks and understanding how employers can protect their staff, their reputation and their sanity, while still delivering a thoroughly enjoyable evening.

art
  • 26 November 2025
  • Employment

The Data Use and Access Act 2025 – how to handle data protection complaints

This article will focus on, in particular, the requirement for data controllers to ensure that, by June 2026, appropriate complaint procedures are put in place (s 103).

art
  • 18 November 2025
  • Employment

Employment Rights Bill – Enhanced protections for pregnant women and new mothers

The Employment Rights Bill will make it unlawful to dismiss pregnant women, mothers on maternity leave and mothers who return to work for at least six months after they return to work, expect for specific circumstances.

art
  • 12 November 2025
  • Employment

GDPR: Who are data controllers and processors?

Controllers and processors have a different set of responsibilities, and have various responsibilities when dealing with data breaches.

art
  • 07 November 2025
  • Employment

Collective redundancies – a shake-up under the Employment Rights Bill (“the Bill”)

In today’s uncertain economic environment, it is rare to see a week go by without a major employer announcing redundancies, be that as a result a restructuring, a contracting business or a merger or acquisition