Women Also Know Stuff Co-founder Works to Amplify Voices
When 嘿嘿视频 political scientist co-founded the Women Also Know Stuff initiative in 2016, the idea went beyond amplifying the voices of her female colleagues around the world. A primary goal was to improve political science.
In a major nod to the project鈥檚 success so far, the American Political Science Association recently awarded Boydstun and 11 colleagues a to broaden the impact of its searchable online database of female political scientists.
is one of six collaborative projects nationwide to receive 2020 Special Projects Fund grants from the association to advance the discipline of political science.
鈥淚t was rewarding and validating to get that signal of confidence from this major association,鈥 said Boydstun, who is the 2020-21 chair of the Women Also Know Stuff 12-member executive committee.
Fed up with being left out
Founding board member , a faculty member at the University of Arizona, was motivated to launch Women Also Know Stuff in February 2016 after seeing a conference program with a nearly all-male speaker lineup and a news article asking six political scientists 鈥 all white men 鈥攆or their views on the election.
and other colleagues across the country joined her in creating a crowdsourced directory to help journalists find female experts in political science to interview for news stories, and make it easier for scholarly meeting organizers to achieve gender parity among their speakers.
Since upgraded with the help of a , the database now contains more than 2,000 female experts, identifying their affiliations, titles, areas of expertise, publications and previous media appearances.
Another project: offering advice on covering election
Network Offers Media Advice on Covering 2020 Presidential Election
Amber Boydstun, professor of political science, is part of a new that is offering journalists evidence-based recommendations for covering the 2020 presidential election.
The network comprises 69 scholars of journalism and political science at more than 40 universities across the country.
In an online white paper, Boydstun and co-authors make media coverage recommendations in three areas:
- How to cover an election amid attempts to undermine it.
- What to do in the case of contested election results.
- How to prepare for the possibility of post-election civil unrest.
"We hope these recommendations 鈥 based on decades of research into electoral processes, news coverage and public opinion 鈥 support the important work journalists are doing to cover the election and safeguard democracy," the authors write.
Addressing implicit bias
The number of women in political science is on the rise. Women hold 29% of full-time faculty positions in the United States and earned 41% of doctorates awarded in the field in 2018.
However, studies have found that men have disproportionately outpaced women in rising to prominence, receiving more research citations and more invitations to speak at conferences, co-author publications and contribute to edited volumes.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e not representing all the different types of people, you won鈥檛 be getting the full depth and breadth of questions being asked in the first place,鈥 Boydstun said.
The Women Also Know Stuff website analytics suggest the initiative is making a difference. To date, the updated site had been viewed more than 50,000 times by more than 38,000 unique visitors. The Twitter account has nearly 30,000 followers.
Boydstun said she and other Women Also Know Stuff leaders are thrilled that their efforts have inspired the founding of , which promotes scholars of color in political science, and other sister organizations.
Volunteer service to the discipline
Boystun said the APSA grant will help the volunteer-run initiative cover ongoing costs, including paying student interns.
She and other leaders of the initiative also hope to host a one-day gathering in Washington, D.C., with news media, foundation representatives and female political scientists 鈥 focusing on women from historically Black colleges and universities and other marginalized communities. With the pandemic, Boydstun said it鈥檚 unclear when that meeting will occur.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been a lot of work, and mostly unpaid work,鈥 Boydstun said of Women Also Know Stuff. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 been the greatest kind of service work, because there is a real sense that we鈥檙e making a genuine difference in the discipline 鈥 not just for women in the discipline, but the good of the discipline as whole.鈥
This story originally appeared . Kathleen Holder is a content strategist in the 嘿嘿视频 College of Letters and Science