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Chief InPost: Rafał Brzoska

Rafał Brzoska was born in Zawada Książęca in 1977. At the of 22 he founded Integer.pl company to distribute leaflets, which soon turned into...

Tuning in to Warsaw vibe

Amila de Saram is a Sri Lankan-Norwegian human rights and development professional disability rights specialist and certified ADHD life coach, based in Warsaw. She’s...

A Remarkable Brain Gain for Poland

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New Urban Development in Katowice

The Capital Park Group is embarking on a transformative project in Katowice with Nowy Wełnowiec, a 30-hectare revitalization of the former Silesia Metallurgical Plant...

The Benefits and Challenges of Hybrid Work

Colliers Define Unveils Findings from the Third Edition of "Hybrid and Beyond" ReportFour years after remote work was introduced to many companies, businesses have...

Rise of women in science & tech

The “PIE Economic Weekly” reported that of the almost 80 million people employed in the EU in the science and technology industry in 2023, 52%, were women.

“According to Eurostat data, which are provided for the so-called EU macroregions, Poland is one of the countries with the highest percentage of women in the science and technology industry,” PIE reported. He also added that in three Polish macroregions the percentage of women in the sector exceeded 58%. These are the macroregions: central (Łódź and Świętokrzyskie voivodeships), where it was 60.59%; eastern (Podlasie, Lublin and Podkarpackie voivodeships) 59.70% and northern (Kuyavian-Pomeranian, Pomeranian and Warmian-Masurian voivodeships) 59.58%.

Other EU regions with such a high percentage include: Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. In turn, the regions with the lowest percentage of women included Malta and Italy – in both countries it was less than 50%. For comparison, in the Masovia macroregion with the lowest result in Poland, this percentage is 54.97%.

Sylwia Ziemacka
Sylwia Ziemacka
“I believe our unique selling point is that we focus on what brings us together. Poland Weekly offers something you will not find anywhere else: a truly international and unifying perspective focused on content that builds cooperation and mutual understanding. This attitude doesn't make us naïve, but it allows us to focus on mutual understanding and a search for solutions. There are so many new challenges that we are all facing, such as energy transformation, climate change and supply chain disruption, to name but a few. By working together and sharing good practices, we can achieve so much more.”
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