4.8 Article

The gendered nature of authorship

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 7, Issue 36, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abe4639

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canada Research Chairs program [950-231768]
  2. University of Wisconsin Information School's Sarah M. Pritchard Faculty Support Fund

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Authorship holds significant symbolic capital in the field of science, yet women often face unfair treatment in this regard. Research findings indicate that women are more likely to experience disagreements over authorship and have their contributions devalued compared to men.
Authorship is the primary form of symbolic capital in science. Despite this, authorship is rife with injustice and malpractice, with women expressing concerns regarding the fair attribution of credit. Based on an international survey, we examine gendered practices in authorship communication, disagreement, and fairness. Our results demonstrate that women were more likely to experience authorship disagreements and experience them more often. Their contributions to research papers were more often devalued by both men and women. Women were more likely to discuss authorship with coauthors at the beginning of the project, whereas men were more likely to determine authorship unilaterally at the end. Women perceived that they received less credit than deserved, while men reported the opposite. This devaluation of women's work in science creates cumulative disadvantages in scientific careers. Open discussion regarding power dynamics related to gender is necessary to develop more equitable distribution of credit for scientific labor.

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