Litcius/Paper detail

Nature, Data, and Power: How Hegemonies Shaped This Special Section

Ambika Kamath, Beans Velocci, Ashton Wesner, Nancy Chen, Vince A. Formica, Banu Subramaniam, María Rebolleda‐Gómez

2022The American Naturalist21 citationsDOI

Abstract

AbstractSystems of oppression-racism, colonialism, misogyny, cissexism, ableism, heteronormativity, and more-have long shaped the content and practice of science. But opportunities to reckon with these influences are rarely found within academic science, even though such critiques are well developed in the social sciences and humanities. In this special section, we attempt to bring cross-disciplinary conversations among ecology, evolution, behavior, and genetics on the one hand and critical perspectives from the social sciences and humanities on the other into the pages-and in front of the readers-of a scientific journal. In this introduction to the special section, we recount and reflect on the process of running this cross-disciplinary experiment to confront harms done in the name of science and envision alternatives.

Topics & Concepts

AbleismDisciplineSection (typography)OppressionSociologySpecial sectionPower (physics)ColonialismSocial scienceRacismUndoingEpistemologyAnthropologyGender studiesPolitical scienceLawPsychologyPhilosophyPoliticsBusinessEngineeringEngineering physicsPsychotherapistQuantum mechanicsPhysicsAdvertisingRace, Genetics, and SocietyZoonotic diseases and public healthGeographies of human-animal interactions