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Technology Leadership Barriers for Women Engineers in Latin AmericanStartups (#1114)

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Date of Conference

December 1-3, 2025

Published In

"Entrepreneurship with Purpose: Social and Technological Innovation in the Age of AI"

Location of Conference

Cartagena

Authors

Martinez Almendares, Wendy Stephanie

Aguilar Montoya, Douglas Adalberto

Abstract

The inequality dynamics in the Latin American technological entrepreneurial ecosystem demonstrate the persistence of systemic barriers that limit female access to leadership positions in technology-based startups. This study examines the implicit exclusion mechanisms that shape the "digital glass ceiling" through a mixed analysis involving 847 female engineers across 12 countries in the region, with special emphasis on El Salvador where it was documented that only 8.3% of technology startups have women as principal co-founders. Through digital ethnographic methodology, professional social network analysis, and in-depth interviews with 156 ecosystem protagonists, four critical dimensions were identified: algorithmic micromachisms in funding platforms (evidenced by the 3% of venture capital allocated to female founders), unconscious biases in executive selection processes, precariousness in business mentorship networks, and asymmetries in the valuation of technical versus relational competencies. In the Salvadoran context, where 64% of microenterprises are led by women but only 12% access technological financing, the findings reveal that barriers transcend quantitative aspects to constitute a phenomenon of cultural invisibilization of female leadership in high-innovation sectors. An inclusive entrepreneurial ecosystem framework is proposed that integrates affirmative financing policies, debiasing protocols in venture capital, and culturally situated technological mentorship platforms for the region.

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