Black, Indigenous and people of colour (BIPOC) individuals are disproportionately impacted by the negative consequences of our ongoing environmental and climate crises, yet their valuable scientific voices are shockingly underrepresented within the fields of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EEB). As early‐career BIPOC EEB researchers, we recognise the key role that our fields play in understanding and mitigating the effects of our ongoing global crises, and are concerned about the lack of diversity we see among our own EEB cohorts and mentors. We present this piece as a call to action for the EEB Academy, drawing on our own experiences and the literature to suggest steps the Academy must take to increase representation of and equity for BIPOC graduate scholars in EEB. We synthesise these steps into four actionable ideas: anti‐racism education and practice, increased funding opportunities, integration of diverse cultural perspectives and a community‐minded shift in PhDs. Importantly, this advice is specifically directed at those who wield power in the Academy (e.g. funding agencies, societies, institutions, departments and faculty), rather than BIPOC scholars already struggling against inequitable frameworks in EEB.
Research in ecology and evolutionary biology (EEB) plays a key role in
understanding and intervening in our current environmental and climate
crisis. Although anthropogenic stressors and climate change continue to
disproportionately affect Black, Indigenous, and people of colour
(BIPOC) individuals, their valuable scientific voices are shockingly
underrepresented within EEB. To underscore this problem, we present a
case study on EEB PhD graduates in the US (1994-2018), which illustrates
that BIPOC scholars are significantly underrepresented in their cohorts.
We recommend key steps that the EEB Academy should take to increase
representation of BIPOC scholars in EEB, including anti-racism education
and practice, increased funding opportunities, integration of diverse
cultural perspectives, and a community-minded shift in PhDs.
Importantly, this advice is directed at those who wield power in the
Academy (e.g., funding agencies, societies, institutions, departments,
and faculty), rather than BIPOC scholars already struggling against
inequitable frameworks in EEB.
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