社会是专业的:团队氛围对LGBTQ环境科学专业成果的影响

IF 1.4 Q3 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
E. Cech, Georgina M. Montgomery, Isis H. Settles, K. Elliott, K. Cheruvelil, Sheila T. Brassel
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在对科学、技术、工程和数学(STEM)领域的性别和种族/民族不平等进行了数十年的研究之后,一个新的学术领域出现了,它以女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、变性人和酷儿(LGBTQ)群体在STEM领域的经历为中心。这项研究倾向于关注STEM背景下的社会边缘化经历,如排斥和骚扰,但LGBTQ人群也可能面临无数与职业相关的不利因素,这些不利因素可能与社会边缘化紧密相关。在这篇文章中,我们的问题是,LGBTQ专业人士工作环境中的负面社会动态是否会因LGBTQ身份而导致职业劣势?根据对在学术团队中工作的环境科学家的调查数据,我们发现,与同龄人相比,LGBTQ科学家不太可能获得专业尊重,更频繁地遇到负面的作者行为,更不可能获得积极的职业指导。与异性恋科学家相比,LGBTQ科学家更不可能在团队中体验到积极的人际氛围(以程序公正和包容性的形式),我们发现这些更消极的团队氛围经历显著地介导(即帮助解释)了LGBTQ地位差异在三个专业结果中的两个(专业尊重和作者经验)。这些发现强调了解释LGBTQ STEM专业人员的负面社会环境如何转化为负面职业结果的重要性。最后,我们讨论了这些结果对LGBTQ不平等研究和促进STEM中更公平的团队环境的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
THE SOCIAL IS PROFESSIONAL: THE EFFECTS OF TEAM CLIMATE ON PROFESSIONAL OUTCOMES FOR LGBTQ PERSONS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Following decades of research on gender and racial/ethnic inequality in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM), a new line of scholarship has emerged that centers the experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) persons in STEM. This research has tended to focus on experiences of social marginalization within STEM contexts such as exclusion and harassment, but LGBTQ persons may also face a myriad of career-related disadvantages that are likely tight-ly entwined with social marginalization. In this article we ask, do negative social dynamics in LGBTQ professionals’ work environments foster professional disadvantages by LGBTQ status? Drawing on survey data from an insightful case of environmental scientists working in academic teams, we find that LGBTQ scientists were less likely to experience professional respect, had more frequent encounters with negative authorship practices, and were less likely to experience positive career mentoring than their peers. LGBTQ scientists were less likely than cisgender-heterosexual scientists to experience positive interpersonal climates in their teams (in the form of procedural justice and inclusivity) and we find that these more negative team climate experiences significantly mediated (i.e., helped account for) LGBTQ status differences along two of the three professional outcomes (professional respect and authorship experiences). These findings underscore the importance of accounting for how negative social environments for LGBTQ STEM professionals can translate into negative professional outcomes. We end by discussing the implications of these results for LGBTQ inequality research and for advancing more equitable team contexts in STEM.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: The Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering (JWM) publishes original, peer-reviewed papers that report on empirical investigations covering a variety of topics related to achieving inclusion of historically underrepresented and minoritized populations in science and engineering education, academe, and professional practice. These populations include those who identify as people of color, white women, first generation college students, veterans, members of the LGBTQ+ community, people with disabilities, and the intersections of these and other identities. The journal especially welcomes research manuscripts that use theoretical frameworks and methodologies appropriate to the study of underrepresented and marginalized populations and/or use intersectional approaches. The journal also publishes studies on novel educational innovations that hold promise for transferability to other contexts.
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