Uh, hate to break it to you, but they already do that, asking I mean, and while not every woman leaves for the same reasons, there have been enough telling stories about the environment and being stifled by professions that don'tseem to want them there, enough to make asking about whether or not the environment is actively chasing people of a certain demographic away, a valid question, if maybe not one with a clear cut answer.Saelune said:Crazy idea...ask the women why they left. Hell, ask everyone. We can presume to know why people stop doing things, but it may not always be what we think. Ending sexism isn't having everything be half men half women, just letting people not be limited on what they do or want to do based on their sex (or gender). The thing of it is, men and women stereotypically want and prefer different things, and even without ANY sexism, things will naturally filter out un-evenly. We cant, or at least should not force people to do what they don't want to just to fill some quota of sexes. Some activities are just inclined towards masculine people, and masculine people will be more inclined to do them, and men more often are more masculine than women even without any macho BS.
As someone who worked in a massively male dominated field in security and switched to a female dominated field in Social Work, specifically in child services, I can tell you that plenty of women left the former, and men the latter, because they felt unwelcome or faced unique hardships because people judged them based on their profession and their co-workers made them feel unwelcome.
50/50 should indeed not be our goal, but the OP doesn't seem to be about trying to attract more people that weren't interested into a field, it was specifically talking about people that wanted to get into the field but left for various reasons.
A lot of the women I knew in security, and the men in social work left because they felt they were being frozen out by a group that was dominated by a single gender, creating a culture that seemed to go out of its way to exclude them, from women facing harassment and flat out being denied jobs they were physically capable of doing in security, and men being frozen out of specific sectors or talked about negatively by female co-workers in social work. While we shouldn't assume that everyone that leaves a field does so because they were chased out or made to feel unwelcome, or assume that the mistreatment is universal or that everyone in the field is guilty of it, but there are enough stories of people in various fields or trying to get into them, of facing discrimination and hardship solely because of their gender, that I believe it is worth consideration.
There is likely more than one reason that each gender dominated field is the way it is, each field likely having different factors that influence why it attracts one gender over the other: physical, cultural, sexual, psychological, a "boys/girls club" mentality is something I would say is pretty easy to see as at least one potential explanatory factor, and fixing it likely won't create a 50/50 gender split in many fields, but its worth looking into if it is actively chasing away people interested in a given profession.