Feminist ecology: Doing, undoing, and redoing gender in science.

Amy S Teller, Apollonya M Porcelli
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Abstract

Women continue to be underrepresented in STEM fields and also are more likely to leave academic careers than men. While much existing sociological research on gender in science focuses on structures, institutions, and policies, we take a cultural and phenomenological approach to the question. We focus on the interaction between structural and micro-sociological forces that uphold existing gender inequalities and drive new forms of inequality within the discipline of ecology by tracing the experience of female graduate students. Ecology in the United States and elsewhere is currently undergoing three shifts, well documented by previous studies-more female scientists, interdisciplinary work, and research in human-altered landscapes-that comprise a transition to what we call "feminist ecology." We ask whether these disciplinary-level shifts in ecology are accompanied by renegotiations in the way ecologists "do gender" as they work. In this paper we argue that despite structural changes toward a feminist ecology, gender inequalities are not eliminated. Our data collected using ethnographic and autoethnographic methods during ecological fieldwork in the Northeastern United States, show that gender inequality persists through daily interactions, shaping the way that fieldwork is conducted and bodies are policed. We provide additional evidence of the way that ecologists and non-ecologists interact during fieldwork, highlighting the embeddedness of scientific disciplines within larger societal forces. Thus, the question of women in science cannot be understood strictly from within the bounds of science but extends to gender relations in society at large. We hope that this study can serve as a teaching tool for university efforts to increase the success, not just the prevalence, of women in science, and facilitate productive interdisciplinary research across disciplines.

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女权主义生态学:在科学中做、取消和重新做性别。
女性在STEM领域的代表性仍然不足,而且比男性更有可能离开学术生涯。虽然现有的关于科学中的性别的社会学研究主要集中在结构、制度和政策上,但我们采取文化和现象学的方法来研究这个问题。我们通过追踪女研究生的经历,关注结构和微观社会学力量之间的相互作用,这些力量维持了现有的性别不平等,并在生态学学科中推动了新形式的不平等。美国和其他地方的生态学目前正在经历三个转变,之前的研究充分证明了这一点——更多的女性科学家、跨学科工作和对人类改变景观的研究——这构成了向我们所说的“女权主义生态学”的过渡。我们要问的是,生态学中这些学科层面的转变是否伴随着生态学家在工作中“做性别”的方式的重新谈判。在本文中,我们认为,尽管朝着女权主义生态的结构性变化,性别不平等并没有消除。我们在美国东北部的生态田野调查中使用民族志和自我民族志方法收集的数据表明,性别不平等在日常互动中持续存在,影响了田野调查的进行方式和对身体的监管。我们提供了生态学家和非生态学家在野外工作中相互作用的额外证据,强调了科学学科在更大的社会力量中的嵌入性。因此,科学中的女性问题不能严格地从科学的范围内理解,而是延伸到整个社会中的性别关系。我们希望这项研究可以作为一种教学工具,帮助大学努力提高女性在科学领域的成功,而不仅仅是普及,并促进跨学科的富有成效的跨学科研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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