TY - JOUR
T1 - Race and diversity in U.S. Biological Anthropology
T2 - A decade of AAPA initiatives
AU - Antón, Susan C.
AU - Malhi, Ripan S.
AU - Fuentes, Agustín
N1 - Funding Information:
We recognize that the key to increasing representation relies on the satisfaction of two major considerations—Biological Anthropology as a discipline must be open and proactive in supporting diversity, and students of color must find themselves drawn to Biological Anthropology as a career choice. To date COD IDEAS programs have been based on the foundational demographic data described above and have focused on network building, mentoring, and outreach to communities. The more costly and targeted of these activities are funded by an NSF grant for the AAPA IDEAS Program (BCS-Biological Anthropology-1516939) to Antón and Malhi. As a result of interest in obtaining this grant, the AAPA went through the process of becoming an NSF-Awardee Institution, a long-term benefit for the entire organization that allows the AAPA to apply for and hold its own federal grants rather than routing them through member institutions.
Funding Information:
President’s John Relethford, Fred Smith and Dennis O’Rourke were critical partners in the origin of the COD. Heide Rohland of BAI and Joyce Lancaster of Allen Press provided invaluable help with the 2017 and 2014 surveys, respectively. Ed Liebow provided comparative data and insights from AAA. The AAPA surveys would not be the same without the foundation provided by Trudy Turner. These surveys deemed exempt by NYU’s IRB standards. S.C.A. is especially grateful to Trudy for the invitation to write this initial summary for the Year-book. For the past 25 years, S.C.A. has benefitted from her association with the Ford Diversity Fellows and NASEMs Ford Fellowship Office who provided innumerable models for diversity programming and meetings. Senior Ford Fellows Alex Chaparro and Mark Lawson, COD WIN Co-Chair Andrea Taylor, and three anonymous reviewers provided insights and suggestions for this article. Many of the initiatives described herein were funded by the AAPA and by the NSF Grant for the AAPA IDEAS Program: Increasing Diversity in Evolutionary Anthropological Sciences (BCS-Biological Anthropology-1516939) to Antón and Malhi. AAPA Treasurer Anne Grauer managed (with good humor) to set up AAPA as an NSF-Awardee institution, for which we are eternally grateful and without which there would be no IDEAS program. Mark Weiss, a member of the original Taskforce on Membership Composition/Gender Equity, supported the idea of an NSF funded program for URM scholars before we could even imagine one, and current program officer Rebecca Ferrell has been an impeccable supporter. The work of the COD is the work of a village and we are grateful to all the IDEAS faculty and students, and to each and every COD member. We are especially grateful to Cara Wall-Scheffler and Marcella Myers for developing and delivering the COD URS annually, and to the AAPA Executive Committees from 2006 to 2017 who have supported these initiatives. The work of the COD extends well beyond those programs aimed at “minority” scientists described here; information on that work can be found at http://physanth.org/about/committees/ diversity/. All COD work is volunteer-generated and we are counting on AAPA members to continue this work and to feel free to contact us with their ideas and energy for the next steps.
Funding Information:
President's John Relethford, Fred Smith and Dennis O'Rourke were critical partners in the origin of the COD. Heide Rohland of BAI and Joyce Lancaster of Allen Press provided invaluable help with the 2017 and 2014 surveys, respectively. Ed Liebow provided comparative data and insights from AAA. The AAPA surveys would not be the same without the foundation provided by Trudy Turner. These surveys deemed exempt by NYU's IRB standards. S.C.A. is especially grateful to Trudy for the invitation to write this initial summary for the Yearbook. For the past 25 years, S.C.A. has benefitted from her association with the Ford Diversity Fellows and NASEMs Ford Fellowship Office who provided innumerable models for diversity programming and meetings. Senior Ford Fellows Alex Chaparro and Mark Lawson, COD WIN Co-Chair Andrea Taylor, and three anonymous reviewers provided insights and suggestions for this article. Many of the initiatives described herein were funded by the AAPA and by the NSF Grant for the AAPA IDEAS Program: Increasing Diversity in Evolutionary Anthropological Sciences (BCS-Biological Anthropology-1516939) to Antón and Malhi. AAPA Treasurer Anne Grauer managed (with good humor) to set up AAPA as an NSF-Awardee institution, for which we are eternally grateful and without which there would be no IDEAS program. Mark Weiss, a member of the original Taskforce on Membership Composition/Gender Equity, supported the idea of an NSF funded program for URM scholars before we could even imagine one, and current program officer Rebecca Ferrell has been an impeccable supporter. The work of the COD is the work of a village and we are grateful to all the IDEAS faculty and students, and to each and every COD member. We are especially grateful to Cara Wall-Scheffler and Marcella Myers for developing and delivering the COD URS annually, and to the AAPA Executive Committees from 2006 to 2017 who have supported these initiatives. The work of the COD extends well beyond those programs aimed at “minority” scientists described here; information on that work can be found at http://physanth.org/about/committees/diversity/. All COD work is volunteerߚgenerated and we are counting on AAPA members to continue this work and to feel free to contact us with their ideas and energy for the next steps.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Association of Physical Anthropologists
PY - 2018/1
Y1 - 2018/1
N2 - Biological Anthropology studies the variation and evolution of living humans, non-human primates, and extinct ancestors and for this reason the field should be in an ideal position to attract scientists from a variety of backgrounds who have different views and experiences. However, the origin and history of the discipline, anecdotal observations, self-reports, and recent surveys suggest the field has significant barriers to attracting scholars of color. For a variety of reasons, including quantitative research that demonstrates that diverse groups do better science, the discipline should strive to achieve a more diverse composition. Here we discuss the background and underpinnings of the current and historical dearth of diversity in Biological Anthropology in the U.S. specifically as it relates to representation of minority and underrepresented minority (URM) (or racialized minority) scholars. We trace this lack of diversity to underlying issues of recruitment and retention in the STEM sciences generally, to the history of Anthropology particularly around questions of race-science, and to the absence of Anthropology at many minority-serving institutions, especially HBCUs, a situation that forestalls pathways to the discipline for many minority students. The AAPA Committee on Diversity (COD) was conceived as a means of assessing and improving diversity within the discipline, and we detail the history of the COD since its inception in 2006. Prior to the COD there were no systematic AAPA efforts to consider ethnoracial diversity in our ranks and no programming around questions of diversity and inclusion. Departmental survey data collected by the COD indicate that undergraduate majors in Biological Anthropology are remarkably diverse, but that the discipline loses these scholars between undergraduate and graduate school and systematically up rank. Our analysis of recent membership demographic survey data (2014 and 2017) shows Biological Anthropology to have less ethnoracial diversity than even the affiliated STEM disciplines of Biology and Anatomy; nearly 87% of AAPA members in the United States identify as white and just 7% as URM scholars. These data also suggest that the intersection of race and gender significantly influence scholarly representation. In response to these data, we describe a substantial body of programs that have been developed by the COD to improve diversity in our ranks. Through these programs we identify principal concerns that contribute to the loss of scholars of color from the discipline at different stages in their careers, propose other directions that programming for recruitment should take, and discuss the beginnings of how to develop a more inclusive discipline at all career stages.
AB - Biological Anthropology studies the variation and evolution of living humans, non-human primates, and extinct ancestors and for this reason the field should be in an ideal position to attract scientists from a variety of backgrounds who have different views and experiences. However, the origin and history of the discipline, anecdotal observations, self-reports, and recent surveys suggest the field has significant barriers to attracting scholars of color. For a variety of reasons, including quantitative research that demonstrates that diverse groups do better science, the discipline should strive to achieve a more diverse composition. Here we discuss the background and underpinnings of the current and historical dearth of diversity in Biological Anthropology in the U.S. specifically as it relates to representation of minority and underrepresented minority (URM) (or racialized minority) scholars. We trace this lack of diversity to underlying issues of recruitment and retention in the STEM sciences generally, to the history of Anthropology particularly around questions of race-science, and to the absence of Anthropology at many minority-serving institutions, especially HBCUs, a situation that forestalls pathways to the discipline for many minority students. The AAPA Committee on Diversity (COD) was conceived as a means of assessing and improving diversity within the discipline, and we detail the history of the COD since its inception in 2006. Prior to the COD there were no systematic AAPA efforts to consider ethnoracial diversity in our ranks and no programming around questions of diversity and inclusion. Departmental survey data collected by the COD indicate that undergraduate majors in Biological Anthropology are remarkably diverse, but that the discipline loses these scholars between undergraduate and graduate school and systematically up rank. Our analysis of recent membership demographic survey data (2014 and 2017) shows Biological Anthropology to have less ethnoracial diversity than even the affiliated STEM disciplines of Biology and Anatomy; nearly 87% of AAPA members in the United States identify as white and just 7% as URM scholars. These data also suggest that the intersection of race and gender significantly influence scholarly representation. In response to these data, we describe a substantial body of programs that have been developed by the COD to improve diversity in our ranks. Through these programs we identify principal concerns that contribute to the loss of scholars of color from the discipline at different stages in their careers, propose other directions that programming for recruitment should take, and discuss the beginnings of how to develop a more inclusive discipline at all career stages.
KW - Ancestry
KW - Diversity Initiatives
KW - Inclusion
KW - Racialized Minority
KW - Underrepresented Minority
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85041121661&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85041121661&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/ajpa.23382
DO - 10.1002/ajpa.23382
M3 - Article
C2 - 29380881
AN - SCOPUS:85041121661
SN - 0002-9483
VL - 165
SP - 158
EP - 180
JO - American Journal of Physical Anthropology
JF - American Journal of Physical Anthropology
ER -