Replication Data for: Reproducing Hierarchies at the APSA Annual Meeting: Patterns of Panel Attendance by Gender, Race, and Ethnicity

Research on the political science profession has shown that homophilous research networks—meaning those organized along the lines of gender and race/ethnicity—reproduce hierarchies. Research networks composed of white men enjoy the most prestige and lead to the most opportunities. This project docum...

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Hauptverfasser: Piscopo, Jennifer M., Xydias, Christina, Atchison, Amy L., Och, Malliga
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creator Piscopo, Jennifer M.
Xydias, Christina
Atchison, Amy L.
Och, Malliga
description Research on the political science profession has shown that homophilous research networks—meaning those organized along the lines of gender and race/ethnicity—reproduce hierarchies. Research networks composed of white men enjoy the most prestige and lead to the most opportunities. This project documents homophilous networks in a setting where they are likely nurtured: the 2019 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association (APSA). We examine the correspondence between the gender and the racial/ethnic composition of section members, panelists, and audience members for four research sections: Political Methodology, Political Psychology, Race, Ethnicity, and Politics, and Women and Politics. We find that attendees’ and panelists’ gender and racial/ethnic identity largely mirror the dominant gender and racial/ethnic group in their section. These findings indicate that homophily manifests at academic conferences, and that efforts to diversify research networks should account for who listens to whom in these settings.
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identifier DOI: 10.7910/dvn/8amhqw
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title Replication Data for: Reproducing Hierarchies at the APSA Annual Meeting: Patterns of Panel Attendance by Gender, Race, and Ethnicity
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