Skills, Talent and Diversity updates
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The role that tech plays in how we live, work and connect has never been more influential. Yet when it comes to moving the dial to achieve gender equality, the industry continues to face challenges.
In 2026, the number of women in STEM is growing but at a glacial rate. According to the latest government census data, women now comprise 26% of the workforce in the STEM sector, meaning that it will take until 2070 to reach full parity1.
To address this disparity and dismantle barriers in the tech world, it is important to understand the intersectional nuances behind the statistics. Menopause, pregnancy loss, neonatal care leave, disability and neurodiversity can all dictate whether women stay, progress, and are fairly remunerated in tech.
The Work Couch, RPC's employment law podcast, has, across multiple conversations, highlighted the critical link between tech and workplace culture by shining a light on lived experiences.
For example, our episodes on menopause, flexible working and caring responsibilities all illustrate how the expectation to be permanently available can quietly exclude talented women from pathways to promotion. For many women juggling caring responsibilities or experiencing chronic health conditions or menopausal symptoms such as insomnia and anxiety, the "always on" culture is unsustainable.
Our discussion with disability advocate Samantha Renke on disability inclusion at work goes further, exposing how ableist assumptions are often baked into workplaces and AI systems. Inaccessible platforms and algorithms trained on nondiverse data sets can lock disabled women out of recruitment, progression and even basic participation.
The Work Couch's mini-series to mark London Tech Week 2024 also delved into the broader landscape: responsible use of AI, and who shapes and governs it. When women, particularly those who are disabled, neurodivergent, or from ethnically diverse backgrounds, are missing from these discussions, bias can creep in and become the default setting.
Throughout our conversations on The Work Couch, a number of recurring intersectional themes emerge:
RPC's Employment, Engagement and Equality team is passionate about supporting this shift. We deliver practical workshops on removing systemic blockers to gender equality, helping businesses implement plans to achieve gender diversity leadership targets. The Work Couch podcast provides a valuable space for learning, where legal insight meets lived experience.
techUK’s TechTogether campaign continues with a focus on ‘Evolving Online Safety'. Our insights this week focus on ensuring AI systems are designed, governed and deployed responsibly, with diverse perspectives shaping how technology impacts society, strengthening cyber defences and reducing vulnerabilities as organisations adopt new technologies and expand digital services, and addressing workplace culture, leadership and systemic barriers to ensure diverse voices shape the future of technology.
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Partner, Engagement & Equality team, RPC
Charlotte White is a partner in law firm RPC's Employment, Engagement & Equality team. Having previously served as general counsel for an international payroll technology business, she is passionate about diversity in tech and moving the dial for gender equality.