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Perspectives: Giving credit where it is due. Tracking contributorship rather than authorship reveals unconscious gender and status disparities in publishing

Description

Sexism is often used to frame the discovery of the structure of DNA in the early 1950s. The story is one in which the contribution of a female scientist is overlooked while her male colleagues reap all the rewards. This is not an uncommon trope in the history of science, a phenomenon labeled as the Matilda effect by science historian Margaret W. Rossiter.
Under closer scrutiny, however, the DNA story reveals a more nuanced narrative about the disparities in giving credit where it is due. These disparities still persist in our contemporary scientific landscape, and the biases behind them are hindering scientific and technological advancement.

Référence

Sugimoto, C.R. et Larivière, V. (2016). Perspectives: Giving credit where it is due. Tracking contributorship rather than authorship reveals unconscious gender and status disparities in publishing. Chemical & Engineering News, 94(35), 32-33.

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Profils liés

Cassidy Sugimoto