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iWOAW Calls For Elimination Of The Term 'Airmen'

Starts Online Petition To FAA Administrator Steve Dickson And Three Others

The Institute for Women Of Aviation Worldwide (iWOAW) has posted an online petition directed at FAA Administrator Steve Dickson and three others calling for the elimination of the word 'Airman' and 'Airmen' from the official nomenclature, saying the term reflects gender bias.

According to the petition, The FAA's website contains more than 40,000 references to Airman or Airmen; ICAO's website lists close to 2,000 airmen references. It does not stop with these administrative organizations. Industry stakeholders and media use them too.

Research indicates that linguistic cues such as gender-exclusive terms that may seem trivial at face value can signal group-based ostracism and lead members of the ostracized group to self-select out of important professional environments.

Women do feel ostracized and are steering away from the aerospace careers publicly labelled as men's careers. Worldwide, the percentage of female pilots is less than 3%, the petition states.

The United States counts 262,025 commercial pilots including 13,692 women according to the latest U.S. Civil Airmen Statistics published by the FAA.

"It is common sense. How long would it take the FAA and ICAO to change the wording if male pilots had to refer to Notices to Airwomen before each flight and carry a certificate including an Airwoman signature field?" iWOAW asks in the petition.

"Gender-neutral terms such Pilot, Aircrew, or Flight Personnel already exist. Technology makes wording changes in documents a matter of will rather than a matter of means.

"Yet, 110 years after Raymonde de Laroche became the 36th person - and the first woman - in the world to earn a pilot licence on March 8, the FAA and ICAO continue to negate their presence in their publications."

(Source: Change.org website. Image from file)

FMI: www.change.org/p/tell-the-faa-and-icao-to-eliminate-gender-exclusive-words-that-keep-women-out-of-aviation-from-their-publications

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