Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Carneiro, Ana Maria
Data de Publicação: 2023
Outros Autores: Gimenez, Ana Maria Nunes, Bueno, André Correia, Ferreira, Carolina Mendes B., Tetzner, Gabriela Araujo, Suzuki, Julia, Lopes, Larissa Aparecida Prevato, Maria Capanema Bezerra, Luiza
Tipo de documento: preprint
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: SciELO Preprints
Texto Completo: https://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/preprint/view/6683
Resumo: Empirical studies have pointed out that academic mobility can increase social capital, contribute to collaborations, and directly influence overall career success (Dueñas-Fernández, Iglesias-Fernández & Llorente-Heras, 2013). However, it is also known that both academic mobility and international scientific collaborations can be negatively impacted by gender inequality. Regarding international mobility, women are underrepresented in all areas of knowledge (Momeni et al., 2022). In science, immobility or low mobility is commonly associated with slower career progression; scarce opportunities to hold coordination and management positions ("glass ceiling"); less insertion in international collaboration networks; and even abandonment of science (Delicado & Alves, 2013; van der Wal, 2021).   The overload of family functions and the partnering effect (Ackers, 2004) are among the obstacles that women may face, which can limit researchers' displacement opportunities (Momeni et al., 2022). This scenario justifies the importance of exploring the international mobility undertaken by Brazilian researchers to analyze, among other aspects, the possible gender imbalances in academic mobility.  The population investigated in this research will be comprised of Brazilians who have done postdoctoral studies abroad. This selection is because they are more advanced in their professional and training trajectories. The phase after the doctorate makes the researcher more independent and responsible for their research agenda, which would leave them better able to conduct high-impact studies (Nerad et al., 2022). The work aims to design research that evaluates the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad on employment in the academic career, considering gender inequality and institutional and systemic aspects (such as area of knowledge, academic productivity, and career position) (Aksnes et al., 2019). For this, a consolidated database will be built based on former postdoctoral fellows of the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) and the triangulation of a set of data sources since there is no consolidated database on mobility and employment ties in the Brazilian case. Next, a comparative study with a descriptive and exploratory design will be carried out between those who had postdoctoral fellowships abroad and those who had postdoctoral fellowships in Brazil without an internship abroad, and which aims, in the future, to enable the carrying out of a quasi-experiment. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: The research design is descriptive and exploratory, in which a consolidated database is built with information about employment, academic production and curriculum, as well as the completion of internships abroad. Thus, possible patterns and differentiations between the academic trajectories and the characteristics of the individuals will be investigated. The consolidated database is constructed by exploring, collecting and cross-referencing information from various data sources with quality control of the selected variables. First, we will explore the databases made available by FAPESP regarding former postdoctoral fellows to obtain information about the individuals funded between 2012 and 2017, such as name, institutional affiliation and area of knowledge. Such information is necessary for cross-referencing with other databases. In addition, other information from the researchers' records will be checked regarding the percentage of missing values such as gender, race/color, sexual orientation, and age, among others. The time frame will allow the verification of scientific production and insertion in the labor market in the post-doctorate conclusion years. Subsequently, the FAPESP database will be used for triangulation with three other data sources: (i) formal employment records from the Annual Social Information Report (RAIS) of the Ministry of Labor and Social Security; (ii) the résumés available on the Lattes platform of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq); and (iii) the institutional affiliation in the scientific production of a bibliometric study.  FINDINGS OR EXPECTED OUTCOMES:  The results found so far show a discrepant distribution of completed fellowships by knowledge area and a high concentration of destination countries in the Global North. The expected outcomes are the obtaining of different patterns between the effects of mobility of postdoctoral fellows abroad and the effects of the characteristics of individuals (gender) in scientific production and in employment. Thus, enabling the generation and substantiation of hypotheses for future work. ORIGINALITY/VALUE:  The originality of this research is grounded on three factors. Firstly, the increase in knowledge on international mobility, emphasizing the impacts of mobility on the careers of Brazilian scientists and academics and on gender inequality, which is still little explored. Secondly, the increase in the knowledge areas studied and in the number of destination countries. Previous studies usually focused on a few areas, favoring those with low female presence (exact and biological sciences and engineering) and a small group of destination countries (mainly countries of the Global North). Thus, comprehensiveness is one of the innovations of this research, without the prior selection of areas of knowledge or countries of destination. Thirdly, the results will be based on a triangulation of four sets of information, which will complement different types of academic links, validation of research data, and greater reliability.  PRACTICAL/SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS:  Gender asymmetries in access to academic mobility highlight the disparities between men and women in career advancement possibilities, considering the relevance of international experiences in the researchers' curriculum. Along with the discussions of Responsible Research Assessment (RRA), global initiatives from groups such as the Research on Research Institute (RoRI) and the Global Research Council (GRC) are bringing the need to consider Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) in research practices and activities to the debate. Thus, it is essential to expand the understanding of gender inequalities in international mobility and academic careers, especially in the Brazilian context. This will contribute to implement EDI plans and policies and create mechanisms aimed at gender equity in the generation of academic mobility opportunities in funding agencies. DIRECTIONS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH/LIMITATIONS:  It is anticipated that there will be two main limitations in the research. The first is the difficulty in obtaining information on the characteristics of individuals. Even with the triangulation of several data sources, the information is often low quality or non-existent. The second limitation stems from the need for more robust methodologies that allow greater inferences about the results, which demands future research advances, where methodologies such as the Generalized Propensity Score (GPS) are implemented.
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spelling Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroadCarreira acadêmica e desigualdades de gênero no Brasil: o efeito da mobilidade internacional no pós-doutoradoAcademic MobilityInternational CollaborationBrazilCareerGenderEmpirical studies have pointed out that academic mobility can increase social capital, contribute to collaborations, and directly influence overall career success (Dueñas-Fernández, Iglesias-Fernández & Llorente-Heras, 2013). However, it is also known that both academic mobility and international scientific collaborations can be negatively impacted by gender inequality. Regarding international mobility, women are underrepresented in all areas of knowledge (Momeni et al., 2022). In science, immobility or low mobility is commonly associated with slower career progression; scarce opportunities to hold coordination and management positions ("glass ceiling"); less insertion in international collaboration networks; and even abandonment of science (Delicado & Alves, 2013; van der Wal, 2021).   The overload of family functions and the partnering effect (Ackers, 2004) are among the obstacles that women may face, which can limit researchers' displacement opportunities (Momeni et al., 2022). This scenario justifies the importance of exploring the international mobility undertaken by Brazilian researchers to analyze, among other aspects, the possible gender imbalances in academic mobility.  The population investigated in this research will be comprised of Brazilians who have done postdoctoral studies abroad. This selection is because they are more advanced in their professional and training trajectories. The phase after the doctorate makes the researcher more independent and responsible for their research agenda, which would leave them better able to conduct high-impact studies (Nerad et al., 2022). The work aims to design research that evaluates the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad on employment in the academic career, considering gender inequality and institutional and systemic aspects (such as area of knowledge, academic productivity, and career position) (Aksnes et al., 2019). For this, a consolidated database will be built based on former postdoctoral fellows of the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) and the triangulation of a set of data sources since there is no consolidated database on mobility and employment ties in the Brazilian case. Next, a comparative study with a descriptive and exploratory design will be carried out between those who had postdoctoral fellowships abroad and those who had postdoctoral fellowships in Brazil without an internship abroad, and which aims, in the future, to enable the carrying out of a quasi-experiment. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: The research design is descriptive and exploratory, in which a consolidated database is built with information about employment, academic production and curriculum, as well as the completion of internships abroad. Thus, possible patterns and differentiations between the academic trajectories and the characteristics of the individuals will be investigated. The consolidated database is constructed by exploring, collecting and cross-referencing information from various data sources with quality control of the selected variables. First, we will explore the databases made available by FAPESP regarding former postdoctoral fellows to obtain information about the individuals funded between 2012 and 2017, such as name, institutional affiliation and area of knowledge. Such information is necessary for cross-referencing with other databases. In addition, other information from the researchers' records will be checked regarding the percentage of missing values such as gender, race/color, sexual orientation, and age, among others. The time frame will allow the verification of scientific production and insertion in the labor market in the post-doctorate conclusion years. Subsequently, the FAPESP database will be used for triangulation with three other data sources: (i) formal employment records from the Annual Social Information Report (RAIS) of the Ministry of Labor and Social Security; (ii) the résumés available on the Lattes platform of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq); and (iii) the institutional affiliation in the scientific production of a bibliometric study.  FINDINGS OR EXPECTED OUTCOMES:  The results found so far show a discrepant distribution of completed fellowships by knowledge area and a high concentration of destination countries in the Global North. The expected outcomes are the obtaining of different patterns between the effects of mobility of postdoctoral fellows abroad and the effects of the characteristics of individuals (gender) in scientific production and in employment. Thus, enabling the generation and substantiation of hypotheses for future work. ORIGINALITY/VALUE:  The originality of this research is grounded on three factors. Firstly, the increase in knowledge on international mobility, emphasizing the impacts of mobility on the careers of Brazilian scientists and academics and on gender inequality, which is still little explored. Secondly, the increase in the knowledge areas studied and in the number of destination countries. Previous studies usually focused on a few areas, favoring those with low female presence (exact and biological sciences and engineering) and a small group of destination countries (mainly countries of the Global North). Thus, comprehensiveness is one of the innovations of this research, without the prior selection of areas of knowledge or countries of destination. Thirdly, the results will be based on a triangulation of four sets of information, which will complement different types of academic links, validation of research data, and greater reliability.  PRACTICAL/SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS:  Gender asymmetries in access to academic mobility highlight the disparities between men and women in career advancement possibilities, considering the relevance of international experiences in the researchers' curriculum. Along with the discussions of Responsible Research Assessment (RRA), global initiatives from groups such as the Research on Research Institute (RoRI) and the Global Research Council (GRC) are bringing the need to consider Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) in research practices and activities to the debate. Thus, it is essential to expand the understanding of gender inequalities in international mobility and academic careers, especially in the Brazilian context. This will contribute to implement EDI plans and policies and create mechanisms aimed at gender equity in the generation of academic mobility opportunities in funding agencies. DIRECTIONS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH/LIMITATIONS:  It is anticipated that there will be two main limitations in the research. The first is the difficulty in obtaining information on the characteristics of individuals. Even with the triangulation of several data sources, the information is often low quality or non-existent. The second limitation stems from the need for more robust methodologies that allow greater inferences about the results, which demands future research advances, where methodologies such as the Generalized Propensity Score (GPS) are implemented.Estudos empíricos têm apontado que a mobilidade acadêmica pode aumentar o capital social, contribuir para colaborações e influenciar diretamente o sucesso geral na carreira (Dueñas-Fernández, Iglesias-Fernández & Llorente-Heras, 2013). No entanto, também se sabe que tanto a mobilidade acadêmica quanto as colaborações científicas internacionais podem ser impactadas negativamente pela desigualdade de gênero. No que diz respeito à mobilidade internacional, as mulheres estão sub-representadas em todas as áreas do conhecimento (Momeni et al., 2022). Na ciência, a imobilidade ou baixa mobilidade é comumente associada a uma progressão de carreira mais lenta; escassas oportunidades de ocupar cargos de coordenação e gerenciamento ("teto de vidro"); menor inserção em redes de colaboração internacional; e até mesmo abandono da ciência (Delicado & Alves, 2013; van der Wal, 2021). A sobrecarga de funções familiares e o efeito de parceria (Ackers, 2004) estão entre os obstáculos que as mulheres podem enfrentar, o que pode limitar as oportunidades de deslocamento dos pesquisadores (Momeni et al., 2022). Esse cenário justifica a importância de explorar a mobilidade internacional realizada por pesquisadores brasileiros para analisar, entre outros aspectos, os possíveis desequilíbrios de gênero na mobilidade acadêmica. A população investigada nesta pesquisa será composta por brasileiros que realizaram estudos de pós-doutorado no exterior. Essa seleção ocorre porque eles estão mais avançados em suas trajetórias profissionais e de formação. A fase após o doutorado torna o pesquisador mais independente e responsável por sua agenda de pesquisa, o que os capacita a conduzir estudos de alto impacto (Nerad et al., 2022). O trabalho tem como objetivo elaborar uma pesquisa que avalie o efeito da mobilidade de pós-doutorado no exterior no emprego na carreira acadêmica, considerando a desigualdade de gênero e aspectos institucionais e sistêmicos (como área de conhecimento, produtividade acadêmica e posição na carreira) (Aksnes et al., 2019). Para isso, será construído um banco de dados consolidado com base em ex-bolsistas de pós-doutorado da Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP) e na triangulação de um conjunto de fontes de dados, uma vez que não existe um banco de dados consolidado sobre mobilidade e vínculos de emprego no caso brasileiro. Em seguida, será realizado um estudo comparativo com um desenho descritivo e exploratório entre aqueles que tiveram bolsas de pós-doutorado no exterior e aqueles que tiveram bolsas de pós-doutorado no Brasil sem estágio no exterior, com o objetivo de possibilitar a realização de um quasi-experimento no futuro. DESENHO/METODOLOGIA/ABORDAGEM: O desenho da pesquisa é descritivo e exploratório, no qual será construído um banco de dados consolidado com informações sobre emprego, produção acadêmica e currículo, bem como a realização de estágios no exterior. Assim, serão investigados possíveis padrões e diferenciações entre as trajetórias acadêmicas e as características dos indivíduos. O banco de dados consolidado é construído explorando, coletando e cruzando informações de várias fontes de dados com controle de qualidade das variáveis selecionadas. Primeiramente, exploraremos as bases de dados disponibilizadas pela FAPESP referentes a ex-bolsistas de pós-doutorado para obter informações sobre os indivíduos financiados entre 2012 e 2017, como nome, afiliação institucional e área do conhecimento. Essas informações são necessárias para cruzar com outras bases de dados. Além disso, outras informações dos registros dos pesquisadores serão verificadas em relação à porcentagem de valores ausentes, como gênero, raça/cor, orientação sexual e idade, entre outros. O período permitirá a verificação da produção científica e inserção no mercado de trabalho nos anos de conclusão do pós-doutorado. Em seguida, a base de dados da FAPESP será utilizada para a triangulação com outras três fontes de dados: (i) registros formais de emprego do Relatório Anual de Informações Sociais (RAIS) do Ministério do Trabalho e Previdência Social; (ii) currículos disponíveis na plataforma Lattes do Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq); e (iii) a afiliação institucional na produção científica de um estudo bibliométrico. RESULTADOS OU RESULTADOS ESPERADOS: Os resultados encontrados até o momento mostram uma distribuição discrepante de bolsas concluídas por área do conhecimento e uma alta concentração de países de destino no Norte Global. Os resultados esperados são a obtenção de diferentes padrões entre os efeitos da mobilidade de bolsistas de pós-doutorado no exterior e os efeitos das características dos indivíduos (gênero) na produção científica e no emprego. Isso permitirá a formulação e a fundamentação de hipóteses para trabalhos futuros. ORIGINALIDADE/VALOR: A originalidade desta pesquisa está fundamentada em três fatores. Primeiramente, o aumento do conhecimento sobre a mobilidade internacional, enfatizando os impactos da mobilidade nas carreiras de cientistas e acadêmicos brasileiros e na desigualdade de gênero, que ainda é pouco explorada. Em segundo lugar, o aumento nas áreas de conhecimento estudadas e no número de países de destino. Estudos anteriores geralmente se concentravam em algumas áreas, favorecendo aquelas com baixa presença feminina (ciências exatas, biológicas e engenharias) e um pequeno grupo de países de destino (principalmente países do Norte Global). Assim, a abrangência é uma das inovações desta pesquisa, sem a pré-seleção anterior de áreas de conhecimento ou países de destino. Em terceiro lugar, os resultados serão baseados em uma triangulação de quatro conjuntos de informações, que complementarão diferentes tipos de vínculos acadêmicos, validação dos dados de pesquisa e maior confiabilidade. IMPLICAÇÕES PRÁTICAS/SOCIAIS: As assimetrias de gênero no acesso à mobilidade acadêmica destacam as disparidades entre homens e mulheres nas possibilidades de avanço na carreira, considerando a relevância das experiências internacionais no currículo dos pesquisadores. Juntamente com as discussões sobre Avaliação Responsável da Pesquisa (RRA), iniciativas globais de grupos como o Research on Research Institute (RoRI) e o Global Research Council (GRC) estão trazendo a necessidade de considerar a Equidade, Diversidade e Inclusão (EDI) nas práticas e atividades de pesquisa para o debate. Portanto, é essencial ampliar a compreensão das desigualdades de gênero na mobilidade internacional e nas carreiras acadêmicas, especialmente no contexto brasileiro. Isso contribuirá para implementar planos e políticas de EDI e criar mecanismos voltados para a equidade de gênero na geração de oportunidades de mobilidade acadêmica em agências de financiamento. DIREÇÕES PARA PESQUISAS FUTURAS/LIMITAÇÕES: Antecipa-se que haverá duas limitações principais na pesquisa. A primeira é a dificuldade em obter informações sobre as características dos indivíduos. Mesmo com a triangulação de várias fontes de dados, as informações muitas vezes são de baixa qualidade ou inexistentes. A segunda limitação decorre da necessidade de metodologias mais robustas que permitam maiores inferências sobre os resultados, o que exige avanços em pesquisas futuras, onde metodologias como o Escore de Propensão Generalizada (GPS) são implementadas.SciELO PreprintsSciELO PreprintsSciELO Preprints2023-08-28info:eu-repo/semantics/preprintinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/preprint/view/668310.1590/SciELOPreprints.6683enghttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/article/view/6683/12684Copyright (c) 2023 Ana Maria Carneiro, Ana Maria Nunes Gimenez, André Correia Bueno, Carolina Mendes B. Ferreira, Gabriela Araujo Tetzner, Julia Suzuki, Larissa Aparecida Prevato Lopes, Luiza Maria Capanema Bezerrahttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessCarneiro, Ana MariaGimenez, Ana Maria NunesBueno, André CorreiaFerreira, Carolina Mendes B.Tetzner, Gabriela AraujoSuzuki, JuliaLopes, Larissa Aparecida PrevatoMaria Capanema Bezerra, Luizareponame:SciELO Preprintsinstname:Scientific Electronic Library Online (SCIELO)instacron:SCI2023-08-25T17:17:50Zoai:ops.preprints.scielo.org:preprint/6683Servidor de preprintshttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scieloONGhttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/oaiscielo.submission@scielo.orgopendoar:2023-08-25T17:17:50SciELO Preprints - Scientific Electronic Library Online (SCIELO)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad
Carreira acadêmica e desigualdades de gênero no Brasil: o efeito da mobilidade internacional no pós-doutorado
title Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad
spellingShingle Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad
Carneiro, Ana Maria
Academic Mobility
International Collaboration
Brazil
Career
Gender
title_short Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad
title_full Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad
title_fullStr Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad
title_full_unstemmed Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad
title_sort Academic career and gender inequalities in Brazil: the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad
author Carneiro, Ana Maria
author_facet Carneiro, Ana Maria
Gimenez, Ana Maria Nunes
Bueno, André Correia
Ferreira, Carolina Mendes B.
Tetzner, Gabriela Araujo
Suzuki, Julia
Lopes, Larissa Aparecida Prevato
Maria Capanema Bezerra, Luiza
author_role author
author2 Gimenez, Ana Maria Nunes
Bueno, André Correia
Ferreira, Carolina Mendes B.
Tetzner, Gabriela Araujo
Suzuki, Julia
Lopes, Larissa Aparecida Prevato
Maria Capanema Bezerra, Luiza
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Carneiro, Ana Maria
Gimenez, Ana Maria Nunes
Bueno, André Correia
Ferreira, Carolina Mendes B.
Tetzner, Gabriela Araujo
Suzuki, Julia
Lopes, Larissa Aparecida Prevato
Maria Capanema Bezerra, Luiza
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Academic Mobility
International Collaboration
Brazil
Career
Gender
topic Academic Mobility
International Collaboration
Brazil
Career
Gender
description Empirical studies have pointed out that academic mobility can increase social capital, contribute to collaborations, and directly influence overall career success (Dueñas-Fernández, Iglesias-Fernández & Llorente-Heras, 2013). However, it is also known that both academic mobility and international scientific collaborations can be negatively impacted by gender inequality. Regarding international mobility, women are underrepresented in all areas of knowledge (Momeni et al., 2022). In science, immobility or low mobility is commonly associated with slower career progression; scarce opportunities to hold coordination and management positions ("glass ceiling"); less insertion in international collaboration networks; and even abandonment of science (Delicado & Alves, 2013; van der Wal, 2021).   The overload of family functions and the partnering effect (Ackers, 2004) are among the obstacles that women may face, which can limit researchers' displacement opportunities (Momeni et al., 2022). This scenario justifies the importance of exploring the international mobility undertaken by Brazilian researchers to analyze, among other aspects, the possible gender imbalances in academic mobility.  The population investigated in this research will be comprised of Brazilians who have done postdoctoral studies abroad. This selection is because they are more advanced in their professional and training trajectories. The phase after the doctorate makes the researcher more independent and responsible for their research agenda, which would leave them better able to conduct high-impact studies (Nerad et al., 2022). The work aims to design research that evaluates the effect of postdoctoral mobility abroad on employment in the academic career, considering gender inequality and institutional and systemic aspects (such as area of knowledge, academic productivity, and career position) (Aksnes et al., 2019). For this, a consolidated database will be built based on former postdoctoral fellows of the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) and the triangulation of a set of data sources since there is no consolidated database on mobility and employment ties in the Brazilian case. Next, a comparative study with a descriptive and exploratory design will be carried out between those who had postdoctoral fellowships abroad and those who had postdoctoral fellowships in Brazil without an internship abroad, and which aims, in the future, to enable the carrying out of a quasi-experiment. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: The research design is descriptive and exploratory, in which a consolidated database is built with information about employment, academic production and curriculum, as well as the completion of internships abroad. Thus, possible patterns and differentiations between the academic trajectories and the characteristics of the individuals will be investigated. The consolidated database is constructed by exploring, collecting and cross-referencing information from various data sources with quality control of the selected variables. First, we will explore the databases made available by FAPESP regarding former postdoctoral fellows to obtain information about the individuals funded between 2012 and 2017, such as name, institutional affiliation and area of knowledge. Such information is necessary for cross-referencing with other databases. In addition, other information from the researchers' records will be checked regarding the percentage of missing values such as gender, race/color, sexual orientation, and age, among others. The time frame will allow the verification of scientific production and insertion in the labor market in the post-doctorate conclusion years. Subsequently, the FAPESP database will be used for triangulation with three other data sources: (i) formal employment records from the Annual Social Information Report (RAIS) of the Ministry of Labor and Social Security; (ii) the résumés available on the Lattes platform of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq); and (iii) the institutional affiliation in the scientific production of a bibliometric study.  FINDINGS OR EXPECTED OUTCOMES:  The results found so far show a discrepant distribution of completed fellowships by knowledge area and a high concentration of destination countries in the Global North. The expected outcomes are the obtaining of different patterns between the effects of mobility of postdoctoral fellows abroad and the effects of the characteristics of individuals (gender) in scientific production and in employment. Thus, enabling the generation and substantiation of hypotheses for future work. ORIGINALITY/VALUE:  The originality of this research is grounded on three factors. Firstly, the increase in knowledge on international mobility, emphasizing the impacts of mobility on the careers of Brazilian scientists and academics and on gender inequality, which is still little explored. Secondly, the increase in the knowledge areas studied and in the number of destination countries. Previous studies usually focused on a few areas, favoring those with low female presence (exact and biological sciences and engineering) and a small group of destination countries (mainly countries of the Global North). Thus, comprehensiveness is one of the innovations of this research, without the prior selection of areas of knowledge or countries of destination. Thirdly, the results will be based on a triangulation of four sets of information, which will complement different types of academic links, validation of research data, and greater reliability.  PRACTICAL/SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS:  Gender asymmetries in access to academic mobility highlight the disparities between men and women in career advancement possibilities, considering the relevance of international experiences in the researchers' curriculum. Along with the discussions of Responsible Research Assessment (RRA), global initiatives from groups such as the Research on Research Institute (RoRI) and the Global Research Council (GRC) are bringing the need to consider Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) in research practices and activities to the debate. Thus, it is essential to expand the understanding of gender inequalities in international mobility and academic careers, especially in the Brazilian context. This will contribute to implement EDI plans and policies and create mechanisms aimed at gender equity in the generation of academic mobility opportunities in funding agencies. DIRECTIONS FOR FURTHER RESEARCH/LIMITATIONS:  It is anticipated that there will be two main limitations in the research. The first is the difficulty in obtaining information on the characteristics of individuals. Even with the triangulation of several data sources, the information is often low quality or non-existent. The second limitation stems from the need for more robust methodologies that allow greater inferences about the results, which demands future research advances, where methodologies such as the Generalized Propensity Score (GPS) are implemented.
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