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1st November 2020
11:00am GMT

The issue of gender equality in STEM is not a new one. Fig says that growing up, there was actually a strong balance of genders. At her beloved summer camps, massive attempts were made to reach children of diverse backgrounds. That did, however, change as she got older.
"I've grown up seeing a lot of girls interested in engineering and STEM, until they slowly start to become interested in other things in middle school and high school," she explains.
"It's those years where less and less girls maintain the same level of interest. Their interest isn't targeted and it becomes phased out. When I entered University, I wasn't the only black woman in the systems engineering programme, but by the time I graduated I was."
Fig says she had a difficult time in the programme and not because of the academic demands, which we can safely assume are colossal, but because of the environment.
"I was very often told to be a secretary of sorts," she says, "to not contribute to the bulk of the project but to make the presentation on it. That really bothered me."
Fig explains that she had always considered herself a capable person, and that a change needed to be made. "I started asserting myself for better or worse," she says.
"I'm sure I rubbed people the wrong way but it didn't matter to me as long as I felt that I was respected. I think it worked. It gave me a load of confidence and it put me in a position where I would no longer be a secretary."
The fact is, getting more girls and young women involved in STEM is not the only issue at hand. Rather, it's about fixing the leaky pipes that already exist.
Many women have successful careers in STEM, but leave the industry altogether in their thirties. Fig is adamant that she can change this. "You're talking about STEM that has historically been white and male, but when you have diverse perspective all it does is drive innovation forward," she says.
"At the end of the day, we're in the business of ideas and I'm glad to see the industry is starting to recognise the immense need for women and people of colour all across the board."
Recently while traveling across America, the 27-year-old found herself in Minneapolis - the place where George Floyd was killed. Fig says the experience had a profound effect on her.
"It was extremely cathartic in a way that I wasn't expecting," she explains. "It was also eerie to be in Minneapolis knowing the recent history of the Black Lives Matter movement.
"I feel like I'm still digesting that experience because I went from protesting during a global pandemic on the streets of Dublin a week after George Floyd was murdered, to a few months later standing in the very city where such violence had been perpetrated."
Fig, like countless others, has had negative experiences around the world, Ireland included, as a direct result of the colour of her skin. "I absolutely think it's important to bring awareness to the injustices that we see in America but also everywhere in the world," she says.
"I've had negative experiences with people based on my race no matter where I've been," she says. "It's something that needs to be talked about. It makes people uncomfortable and I understand why, [but] it's something that can no longer be pushed aside.
"I'm the first black Miss Universe Ireland, and I've had to deal with certain people who did not like that. It's a new day in Ireland. There are young people with diverse backgrounds and we've never had that before. The time has come to talk."Explore more on these topics: