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Women of the Wild: Challenging Gender Disparities in Field Stations and Marine Laboratories

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Women of the Wild: Challenging Gender Disparities in Field Stations and Marine Laboratories

Contributors:

By (Author) Victoria McDermott
Edited by Jennifer M. Gee
Edited by Amy R. May
Contributions by Danielle Becker
Contributions by Lisa Busch
Contributions by Diane M. Debinski
Contributions by Marilyn Fogel
Contributions by Jessica E. Griffin
Contributions by Gary M. Holliday
Contributions by Yamila Hussein-Shannan

ISBN:

9781793629401

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books

Publication Date:

3rd March 2022

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Gender studies, gender groups
Gender studies: women and girls

Dewey:

331.41330973

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

334

Dimensions:

Width 163mm, Height 236mm, Spine 24mm

Weight:

635g

Description

Field stations and marine laboratories (FSMLs) are sentinels of Earths climate, providing scientists with the infrastructure to collect data in otherwise inaccessible areas of the globe. Many FSMLs were built around and continue to perpetuate male-dominated institutional ideologies, making it difficult for women, BIPOC, and those with intersecting identities to progress, succeed, and thrive. In a collaborative effort across field ecologists and communication scholars working with women navigating these spaces, this books priorities are to: 1) document the gender history of FSMLs; 2) provide a context for the current organizational culture and understand the current communication climate dynamics; 3) explore current barriers to leadership, success, and factors that contribute to positive communication climates in FSMLs, and 4) explore strategies, programs, and interventions for supporting womens leadership roles, as well as, to develop best practices for policy, resource allocation, and field station design to better support and increase womens leadership roles in FSMLs.

Reviews

"We tend to romanticize wildlife research in remote places, but that belies some serious challenges women in particular have to face in doing fieldwork. While the dangers of the wild make for thrilling and sometimes tragic tales, what we don't often hear about are the particular risks women face from predatory men. Women of the Wild is a refreshing and powerful edited volume that brings together a variety of experiences of women doing research in remote field stations and marine laboratories around the world. This collection includes research-based articles, first person accounts, and fictionalized retellings of harrowing experiences and creative responses from women who nevertheless persisted. A must read for anyone who does fieldwork, has field researchers in their life, or simply enjoys reading about adventures in the wild."

--Madhusudan Katti, NC State

"Women of the Wild is an empowering, engaging, and intellectually stimulating set of chapters that depict, with delightful and sometime heart-wrenching detail, how women who work in field stations and marine laboratories (FSMLs) persevere, improvise, manage, and relate to others and their environmental challenges. From interview and case studies to autoethnographies, the varied approaches build new knowledge about and practical strategies for handling these women's everyday experiences. Their inspirational chapters speak to the passion and resilience in human endeavors."

--Patrice Buzzanell, Distinguished Professor, University of South Florida

Author Bio

Victoria McDermott is current Ph.D. student and instructor of communication at the University of Maryland and adjunct faculty at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

Jennifer M. Gee is director of the James San Jacinto Mountains and Oasis de los Osos Reserves, field research stations that are a part of the University of California Natural Reserve System and the University of California, Riverside.

Amy R. May is assistant professor in the Department of Communication and Journalism at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

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