We are proud to play an active role in promoting and celebrating diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) across our company and through our publications and activities.
At Springer Nature, our mission is to open doors to discovery, enabling millions of researchers, teachers, clinicians and other professionals to access, trust and make sense of the latest insights so that together we can improve and enrich lives and help to protect our planet for future generations. We believe that DEI are essential to achieving this mission.
We commit to championing DEI in the communities we serve, using our networks and brands. We will work to eliminate barriers to creating, discovering and using knowledge, and supporting equitable outcomes in learning and advancing scholarship — from young learners to PhD-level and beyond.
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion is one of our highest strategic priorities and our approach has two main streams: an internal focus on DEI within our organisation, and an external view, working with the research, education and professional communities we are a part of.
We want everyone at Springer Nature to feel able to contribute at their best and thrive, together creating a diverse and inclusive culture with structures that support equitable opportunities for merit-based success.
Our employee networks unite colleagues who share an identity with those who support them and who want to learn more about their perspectives and experiences. The networks — with more than 1,400 members — focus on building connections between colleagues, raising awareness on important topics, consulting on business initiatives and advocating for their communities at Springer Nature and beyond. In 2021, our networks organised over 50 events and shared over 75 blog posts.
We support network projects and events with a robust governance structure, sponsorship by senior leaders and advice and resources from the DEI team. Visit ouremployee networks page to find out more.
In 2022, Springer Nature launched its latest 12-month guided mentoring programme for 85 mentee/mentor pairs. It connects mentees from three groups who experience lower levels of inclusion or are currently underrepresented in leadership at Springer Nature, as identified by the 2021 Global Inclusion and Diversity survey, with mentors within our organisation. Its goal is to help mentees to develop professionally by building new skills, expanding their networks and growing their careers at Springer Nature.
Strategy focus | Action we’ve taken |
Equitable recruitment and succession |
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Representation goals to improve representation in global leadership | To build an inclusive organisation, we set aspirational goals for representation across our senior leadership teams.
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Talent development that recognises structural inequalities |
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Inclusive leadership as well as individual responsibility for inclusion |
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Investment in our employee networks |
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We are committed to using our networks, brands and voice to champion diversity, equity and inclusion in the research, education and professional communities we work with.
In recent years, we have taken steps across our portfolio, aiming to improve representation and amplify the voices of underrepresented perspectives, and to make our products and services more accessible. We know there is more to be done and we commit to driving progress.
To help us achieve our mission to open doors to discovery for all, we have a strategic framework, outlining where we can make a difference and how we will take action.
The contribution made by Black innovators and leaders to the fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) has not always been widely recognised. In 2021, Springer Nature’s Black Employee Network launched a speaker series, available onYouTube, that aims to showcase Black excellence, especially for those entering the research publishing and STEM sectors. Network organisers interview speakers from partner organisations in areas related to STEM about their career paths, role models, mentorship and diversity.
Transgender authors can face a lengthy and very public process, often with associated personal and professional risk, when seeking to correct their publication record. In 2021, we announced the implementation of a new policy to enable trans authors and others to correct their names on their published works.
By providing the tools and support to do this silently and safely, we aim to redress these challenges for authors and to further drive forward the elimination of these systemic barriers within the academic community. As part of this policy, biographical information, including pronouns and author photographs, will be corrected as needed to reflect the name change. We have implemented this policy across all of our scholarly journals, magazines, conference proceedings and books.
Our strategic focus | How we’ll do it | Examples of our action so far |
Share our DEI ambition | Clearly communicate our position and ambition for DEI by developing and widely sharing the principles on which we base our engagement with our communities and business partners. |
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Data driven | Collect and use reliable data on DEI opportunities in our communities to measure, monitor and further our progress by developing best practices of data collection and reporting. |
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Inclusive and accessible content | In our published content and events: actively promote DEI by positively profiling the work of authors, researchers and academics from underrepresented groups in all stages of their careers and do so accessibly for all audiences. Promote better research practice through our policies. |
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Increase representation | For our commissioned authors, peer reviewers and editorial board members: further increase diverse representation by engaging and supporting our external networks. |
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Understand DEI in our supply chain | In our supply chain: diversify our publishing supply chain by putting transparent processes in place to create and track new business relationships. |
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Understand structural barriers | Research and understand structural barriers to equality in the research and education communities we work with, by leveraging our networks, brands, voice and convening power to facilitate the wider sharing and discovery of research, data and perspectives. |
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Address these barriers with partners | With our communities, societies, policymakers and funders, address structural barriers to opportunity in publishing by forming partnerships and actively working with others (with focus on the Global South and inherited privilege of elite institutions). |
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ReadThe Source ↗ blog for more DEI resources and commentary.
Through our research, education and professional publishing business we interact with millions of people every day. We connect with them as authors, as peer reviewers, as editors of our journals, as readers, as teachers and as users of our platforms. This means that we have the opportunity to influence behaviour on a large scale and affect real change.
Together with Clarivate, Springer Nature has changed the name of 21 journals part of the Springer Nature Medizin imprint to become more clearly inclusive. The titles had been named after the profession to which their content was targeted and in the German language the gender-neutral titles for professions is usually identical to the masculine form. They now focus on the specialist field it is publishing research in. For example, Der Internist is changing to Die Innere Medizin (Internal Medicine) and Der Chirurg (The Surgeon) to Die Chirurgie (Surgery). The content concept, thematic focus and viability of each title will remain unchanged.
Shortly after the tragic murder of George Floyd in 2020,Nature committed to producing a special issue of the journal on racism in science under the guidance of external experts and joined the #shutdownstem movement. Four guest editors were invited to help guide this work: Melissa Nobles, Chad Womack, Ambroise Wonkam and Elizabeth Wathuti. Together they worked with the Nature team to help guide content for two upcoming special issues due later this year, and wrotethis editorial setting out why science needs to reckon with its history of racism, and their ambitions forNature.
As part of their objective to produce inclusive content that supports all students and teachers, Macmillan Education has created Diversity, Equity and Inclusion guidelines for all of their editorial, marketing and digital teams. These are available in English and Spanish and are being used across their various Curriculum and ELT publishing teams. They have also created internal training that helps employees understand how to use the DEI guidelines to create educational content as well as introduce them to different DEI concepts.
Action we’re taking |
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MAGDALENA SKIPPER, EDITOR IN CHIEF, NATURE
Many groups and perspectives are currently underrepresented in the publishing industry, which is a challenge that we are actively trying to address at Springer Nature. We are seeking candidates who believe they can contribute to diversity, equity and inclusion in our organisation, in our content, or both. We welcome applicants from all backgrounds, and we particularly encourage candidates from historically underrepresented groups to apply, including but not limited to Black people, Indigenous people and people of colour, people from socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds, LGBTQ+ people, people from underrepresented social castes, religious minorities and people with a disability and/or a neurodivergent condition.
Read thisblog from Michelle He to learn more about the internship programme. Michelle was part of our first internship programme in 2023.