我们团结起来更强大:为拉美和代表性不足的生态学家建立社区以克服障碍

Diogo B. Provete, Sebastian Moreno, Elvira D'Bastiani, Luis Y. Santiago-Rosario, Shersingh Joseph Tumber-Dávila
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引用次数: 0

摘要

多元化群体可为研究问题提供创造性的解决方案,因为来自不同背景和观点的人可提供宝贵的意见,而这些意见在同质群体中可能会丢失(Hong 和 Page,2004 年;Phillips 等人,2014 年;Gardiner,2020 年)。然而,拉丁美洲和其他多元化及代表性不足的生态学家必须应对其他生态学家所没有的挑战(Nuñez 等,2021 年;Arenas-Castro 等,2024 年)。其中一些挑战包括但不限于语言障碍(例如,Ramírez-Castañeda 2020、Amano 等 2023、Cao 等 2024)、女性生态学家的障碍(另见 Martínez-Blancas 等 2022)、对野外和户外安全和可及性的恐惧(另见 Ramírez-Castañeda 等 2022)以及对编码和其他计算及机构资源的获取。为了讨论这些问题并提出切实可行的解决方案,我们为美国生态学会(ESA)2023 年年会组织了一场题为 "我们团结起来更强大 "的研讨会:为拉美和代表性不足的生态学家建立社区以面对障碍"。我们广泛要求小组成员讨论和思考以下问题:我们如何才能支持北美以外的生态学家展示他们的研究、建立网络、开展合作并解决他们所面临的问题和不平等现象?这些讲座介绍了不同组织在拉丁美洲和加勒比地区通过解决语言障碍、妇女相关问题、文化相关教学、户外活动和公民科学等问题建立多样化生态学家和代表性不足社区的新成果或经验分享。这些讲座为年会的座右铭 "人人享有生态学 "增添了新的视角,讨论了北美以外地区生态学家面临的障碍,并根据演讲者和他们所代表的群体的经验以及研讨会期间讨论的其他问题提出了解决方案:E. D'Bastiani (Mulheres na Ecologia), S. Moreno (Latino Outdoors), and L. Santiago-Rosario (Club Eco-Evo Latinoamérica).然而,对于生态学社区的人们为建立社区、弥合北美主要群体以外的生态学家所面临的差距和障碍所做的许多努力,我们还只是刚刚起步。拉美和加勒比海分会正通过各种方式继续加强这一努力,继续与不同群体合作,并在 2024 年长滩欧空局年会期间参与了多项活动。例如,拉丁美洲和加勒比海分会组织了两场会议,其中一场是本文所述 2023 年研讨会的直接后续活动,邀请了拉丁美洲各地正在为生态学家创建网络和社区的组织,题为 "拉丁美洲网络在支持生态学家整个职业生涯中的作用"。此外,拉丁美洲和加勒比分会还组织了一次会议,题为 "跨语言和边界出版我们的生态学",重点讨论在生态学期刊上发表文章的语言和无障碍障碍。最后,拉丁美洲和加勒比海分会与欧空局的其他分会合作组织了一次研讨会,讨论各分会如何为早期职业科学家创造包容性空间,以及如何使生态学领域的招聘、留用和成功率得到提高。我们认识到,这些孤立的努力无法提供减少拉丁美洲生态学家以及来自边缘化背景的广大生态学家所面临的障碍和差距所需的所有解决方案,但我们的目标是继续履行使命,汇聚和强调生态社区的各种努力,共同迈向更强大的未来。
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We Are Stronger Together: Building Community to Face Barriers for Latin American and Underrepresented Ecologists

Diverse groups can provide creative solutions to research problems, as people from different backgrounds and points of view offer valuable input that would otherwise be lost in homogenous groups (Hong and Page 2004, Phillips et al. 2014, Gardiner 2020). Yet, Latin American and other diverse and underrepresented ecologists must deal with challenges that others do not (Nuñez et al. 2021, Arenas-Castro et al. 2024). Some of these challenges include, but are not limited to, language barriers (e.g., Ramírez-Castañeda 2020, Amano et al. 2023, Cao et al. 2024), barriers for female-identifying ecologists (see also Martínez-Blancas et al. 2022), fear of safety and accessibility in the field and the outdoors (see also Ramírez-Castañeda et al. 2022), and access to coding and other computational and institutional resources. Motivated to discuss these issues and propose practical solutions, we organized a symposium for the Ecological Society of America (ESA) Annual Meeting in 2023 titled “We are stronger together: Building community to face barriers for Latin American and underrepresented ecologists.” We broadly asked the panelists to discuss and reflect on the following: How can we support ecologists outside of North America to showcase their research, network, collaborate, and tackle the issues and inequalities they face?

The talks presented novel results or shared experiences from different organizations already engaged in building communities of diverse ecologists and underrepresented communities through tackling language barriers, women-related issues, culturally relevant teaching, outdoor activities, and citizen science in Latin America and the Caribbean. The talks contributed to the annual meeting's motto of “Ecology for all” by adding a new perspective to the discussion surrounding barriers faced by ecologists outside North America and proposing solutions derived from the experiences of our speakers and the groups they represent, as well as others emerging from discussion during the symposium.

Three of the symposium participants agreed to share their perspectives and findings following the symposium: E. D'Bastiani (Mulheres na Ecologia), S. Moreno (Latino Outdoors), and L. Santiago-Rosario (Club Eco-Evo Latinoamérica).

The symposium organized by the ESA Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) Chapter of ESA aimed to highlight diverse efforts to address challenges faced by ecologists from Latin America and additional underrepresented backgrounds. However, we have only begun to scratch the surface regarding the many efforts by folks in the ecology community to build community and bridge the gaps and barriers faced by ecologists beyond the dominant groups in North America.

The LAC chapter is continuing to build upon this effort in various ways by continuing to work in partnership with diverse groups and was involved with several activities during the 2024 ESA Annual Meeting in Long Beach. For example, the LAC chapter organized two sessions, one of which is a direct follow-up of the 2023 symposium described here, inviting organizations across Latin America who are creating networks and communities for ecologists titled “The Role of Latin American Networks in Supporting Ecologists Throughout Their Careers.” Furthermore, the LAC chapter organized a session focused on the language and accessibility barriers regarding publishing in ecological journals titled “Publishing our ecology across languages and borders.” Lastly, the LAC chapter worked together with other ESA chapters to organize a symposium on how sections/chapters are creating inclusive spaces for early career scientists and how that has led to better recruitment, retention, and success in ecology. We plan to thoroughly describe the outcomes of all these events soon in a Bulletin piece.

While we recognize that these efforts in isolation will not provide all the solutions needed to reduce the barriers and gaps faced by ecologists in Latin America and broadly ecologists from marginalized backgrounds, we aim to continue with the mission of bringing together and highlighting a diversity of efforts across ecological communities and moving forward stronger together.

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