One of the institutions from which the University of Huddersfield is descended is the Huddersfield Female Educational Institute, created in 1846 and one of the pioneers of its kind. Even today, the University is amongst the leaders is offering opportunities to women – of the 3241 women who started a degree in 2018/19, 1467 (45%) were from families where their parents had no experience of higher education (full-time equivalent figures). In that year, of 5522 graduates, 3151 (57%) were women; and in disciplines associated with medicine they outnumbered men.

We systematically measure and track women's application rate to the University, their acceptance and entry rate, and their study completion and graduation rate at the University – this is a long-standing commitment to gender equality and now carried out as part of the Access and Participation process overseen by the Office for Students.

The University’s Access and Participation Plan, which includes data recording the University’s successes in supporting women's applications, acceptance/entry, and participation at the University, and our plans for ensuring that this continues, is publically available.

We support schemes such as the Yorkshire Sound Women Network which promote opportunities in traditionally male spheres (in this case sound and music technology), supporting efforts to address under-representation, and in general encourage applications by women in subjects where they are underrepresented.

The University has formal policies on non-discrimination against women, and transgender people. We also have maternity and paternity policies that support women’s participation.

We engage with the wide range of childcare providers in the vicinity of campus to enable students and staff to make choices for their children that suit the varied patterns of their other commitments.

Among senior academic staff, working at Grade 9 and above (of whom there 323), female colleagues number 124, or 38%.