Epistemic Exclusion: Scholar(ly) Devaluation That Marginalizes Faculty of Color

Faculty of color experience a number of challenges within academia, including tokenism, marginalization, racial microaggressions, and a disconnect between their racial/ethnic culture and the culture within academia. The present study examined epistemic exclusion as another challenge in which formal...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of diversity in higher education 2021-12, Vol.14 (4), p.493-507
Hauptverfasser: Settles, Isis H., Jones, Martinque K., Buchanan, NiCole T., Dotson, Kristie
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container_end_page 507
container_issue 4
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container_title Journal of diversity in higher education
container_volume 14
creator Settles, Isis H.
Jones, Martinque K.
Buchanan, NiCole T.
Dotson, Kristie
description Faculty of color experience a number of challenges within academia, including tokenism, marginalization, racial microaggressions, and a disconnect between their racial/ethnic culture and the culture within academia. The present study examined epistemic exclusion as another challenge in which formal institutional systems of evaluation combine with individual biases toward faculty of color to devalue their scholarship and deem them illegitimate as scholars. Using data from interviews with 118 faculty of color from a single predominantly White, research-intensive institution, we found that epistemic exclusion occurs through formal hierarchies that determine how scholarship is valued and the metrics used to assess quality, and through informal processes that further convey to faculty of color that they and their scholarship are devalued. In addition, there was variability in reporting these experiences by race, gender, nationality, and discipline. We found that faculty of color coped with epistemic exclusion by being assertive and by seeking validation and support outside the institution. Finally, participants described a number of negative work-related and psychological consequences of their epistemic exclusion. We discuss epistemic exclusion as a form of academic gatekeeping that impedes the recruitment, advancement, and retention of faculty of color and offer strategies to address this barrier.
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source EBSCOhost APA PsycARTICLES
subjects Academic Settings
Asians
Assertiveness
Barriers
Black People
College Faculty
Comprehension
Coping
Cross Cultural Differences
Cultural Differences
Diversity
Epistemology
Ethnicity
Female
Gender Differences
Grants
Human
Intellectual Disciplines
Latinos/Latinas
Male
Marginalization
Microaggression
Minority Group Teachers
Periodicals
Power Structure
Professional Recognition
Racial and Ethnic Groups
Racial Bias
Racial Differences
Scholarship
Teacher Recruitment
Value Judgment
Work Environment
Writing for Publication
title Epistemic Exclusion: Scholar(ly) Devaluation That Marginalizes Faculty of Color
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