Our Purpose

The International Institute for Women in Construction exists to accelerate the attraction, development, and retention of women in construction and related industries globally. We are an ignitor, a think tank, fostering improved sharing of data, implementation of effective strategies, and bold thinking throughout the world.

Research

IIWIC serves as a global repository for data, research, and best practices focused exclusively on women in construction and related industries.

Global Storytelling

Culture shifts when stories shift. Through podcasts and global media, IIWIC amplifies the voices of the organizations, associations, unions, teams and individuals who are supporting women in construction.

Convenings, Partnerships, and Alliances

Our convenings bring together CEOs, union leaders, government officials, educators, and advocates to share what’s working, what’s not, and what we need to do differently to attract, develop, and retain women in construction.

Funding and Scale

Eventually we will fund the scaling of effective strategies throughout the world.

Dr. Gretchen Gagel

Founder and CEO

I created this global institute not to replace the work of the many people and organizations who are working to increase the number and success of women in construction and related fields such as engineering, energy, and mining. Rather we want to support greater collaboration and funding to support strategies that are working. Our goal is to double the number of women in construction over the next 10 years.

The Global Challenge

The US construction industry faces a labor shortfall of approximately 750,000 workers and countries throughout the world face similar construction labor shortages such as Australia’s 290,000 shortfall. Attracting, developing, and retaining more women in construction is one critical strategy for ensuring a sustainable industry capable of supporting the capital asset and infrastructure needs of our society. In the US, women comprise approximately 4% of the trade workers and 10-12% of the construction industry workforce. While efforts to attract, develop, and retain women in the construction industry are gaining momentum, these efforts are at times fragmented and underfunded, and there is no global source of data on women in construction to track progress.

Read the Study