All LGBT+ articles
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News
Scientific societies fail to capture members’ true diversity
US Stem organisations urged to collect more inclusive demographic data to better support distinct underrepresented groups
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Opinion
Come fly with me… just not there, or there
Travel risk assessments should account for the prejudice faced by Queer scientists
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Opinion
LGBTQ+ diversity in science and universities
Many queer scientists still feel they need to hide their full identity at work
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Careers
The daily struggle of LGBTQ+ scientists
Workplace equality for gender and sexual minorities remains a pipe dream in Stem
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Opinion
Martin Gouterman: the gay man behind the four-orbital model
Abhik Ghosh tells the story of a porphyrin chemist who was a leading figure in Seattle’s gay rights movement of the 1960s
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Webinar
LGBT+ inclusivity – Building a better chemistry culture
Join us to discuss how the chemical sciences can best support and retain LGBT+ individuals
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Opinion
Being trans in academia
The transgender community faces unique problems in the academic workplace
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News
Tom Welton named Royal Society of Chemistry’s next president
Head of chemistry at Imperial College and diversity champion will take the helm next year
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News
Discrimination and exclusion still a fact of life for LGBT+ scientists in UK
Survey reveals worrying levels of marginalisation but 70% of respondents think workplaces are improving
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Opinion
Pride and prejudice
Cambridge’s first official Pride event stood in contrast to the everyday experiences of some LGBT+ scientists, but a new report shows how things are improving
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RSC
Be the change – Creating a positive workplace is up to us all
Report: Exploring the workplace for LGBT+ physical scientists
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Review
The Autobiography of a Transgender Scientist
Ben Barres’ memoir discusses his research and advocacy work
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News
A walk on the Pride side
On July 7, the streets of London filled with glitter and rainbows for the Pride in London parade. Chemistry World joined scientists marching for Pride in Stem
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News
Leaky pipeline for LGBQ university students on science and engineering degrees
US students who identify as LGBQ are 8% less likely than their heterosexual peers to finish Stem courses
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Opinion
'No sexuality please, we're scientists'
David Smith wonders why gay scientists seem to stay unseen, and asks does it matter?