(Press-News.org) TORONTO, December 20, 2024 — The unspoken rule for women of colour in academia is to be everything to everyone – mentor, diversity champion, tireless scholar, and silent workhorse, says York University equity studies Assistant Professor Yvonne Su in her recent paper published today in Nature Human Behaviour.
“We are expected to carry the banner of inclusion, but we are not truly included. Inclusion, as it’s currently defined, is about optics, not transformation,” observes Su in the Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies. “It’s about showing diversity on the surface without addressing the deeper inequalities embedded in the institution. We are asked to fix the system, but we’re not allowed to question its foundations.”
While delving into her own experiences facing challenges as a Chinese Canadian academic, Su draws attention to the balancing act and the pressure that Kamala Harris had to undergo during her presidential campaign as a woman of colour. “The first Black and South Asian woman vice-president and presidential candidate, Harris was supposed to represent the pinnacle of inclusion in American politics, but the scrutiny she faces is relentless.”
Su, who is the director of York’s Centre for Refugee Studies expresses her frustration in believing in the promise of inclusion if she worked hard enough, adapted to the culture, and played her part in promoting diversity, she could be the ideal academic. “But the more I tried to meet these expectations, the more I realized that inclusion in academia is conditional.”
She also notes that seemingly collegial advice from male colleagues is a form of benevolent sexism, which reinforces traditional gender roles and subtly undermine women’s authority or independence. “It's been two years, since I realized benevolent sexism was happening to me and I still have not been able to find a way to stop it.”
While challenging the academy to stop tokenizing women of colour, she urges proper safeguards and protections are established. “We want to do the work that will fix the system, but you need to give us the space, autonomy and authority to do this work.”
Su notes that many of her colleagues who are woman of colour are afraid to stand up for themselves because it is unsafe. She however adds that speaking out will not change their status as visible minorities.
“Academia is changing, and institutions need to change with it, or they will be left behind,” Su concludes.
END
York U professor’s new paper challenges tokenizing women of colour in academia
An accomplished Chinese Canadian academic in equity studies Assistant Professor Yvonne Su says embracing diversity must go beyond optics
2024-12-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Tiny antennas on cells offer new ALS insights
2024-12-20
Leuven, 20 December 2024- Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a devastating neurodegenerative disease that affects motor neurons. The average life span after diagnosis of this incurable disease is two to five years. In the relentless pursuit of understanding the cause of motor neuron death, scientists from KU Leuven and the VIB Center for Brain and Disease Research have identified an intriguing new lead: tiny, antenna-like structures 0n cells called primary cilia. Their study, published in Brain, could open a potential new avenue for therapeutic development.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s ...
Geothermal aquifers offer green potential but quality checks required
2024-12-20
The aquifer thermal energy storage (ATES) system, which uses geothermal heat as a renewable energy source, is one of the solutions to reducing fuel consumption and carbon dioxide emission. This system stores heat underground in aquifers, using groundwater as a heat medium. The heat is then extracted as needed according to the season to efficiently heat and cool buildings.
Its use is mainly expanding in Europe, and its widespread introduction is expected in Japan. However, regular inspection is required to utilize ...
Large Hadron Collider regularly makes magic
2024-12-20
A brotherly research duo has discovered that when the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) produces top quarks – the heaviest known fundamental particles – it regularly creates a property known as magic.
This finding, published in Physical Review D, has implications for the progression of quantum computing, with magic being a measure that describes how difficult a quantum system is for a non-quantum computer to calculate.
“The higher the magic, the more we need quantum computers to describe the behaviour,” explains Professor Martin White, from the University ...
Functionality of a grapevine transport protein defined
2024-12-20
Researchers at the University of Adelaide have discovered that a protein which mediates the transport of alkali metal ions, such as potassium, and halides ions across plant membranes acts similarly to a protein found in animals.
The protein is a cation-chloride cotransporter (CCC), and these are present in all cellular life forms. Some CCCs are able to transport two types of ions, both potassium and halide chloride, while others can also transport a third – sodium.
The selectivity of plant CCCs has been controversial, and it was previously understood ...
Changes in store for atmospheric rivers
2024-12-20
Communities up and down the West Coast of the United States can expect the potent storms known as atmospheric rivers to evolve as the climate warms. But residents in Southern California will see much different changes than residents in more northerly locations like Seattle.
New research, led by scientists at the U.S. National Science Foundation National Center for Atmospheric Research (NSF NCAR), found that warming conditions will increase evaporation of ocean waters and significantly alter atmospheric rivers to the south. Farther north, however, atmospheric rivers will be most influenced by rising temperatures in the ocean and atmosphere.
While ...
First results from 2021 rocket launch shed light on aurora’s birth
2024-12-20
Newly published results from a 2021 experiment led by a University of Alaska Fairbanks scientist have begun to reveal the particle-level processes that create the type of auroras that dance rapidly across the sky.
The Kinetic-scale Energy and momentum Transport experiment — KiNET-X — lifted off from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia on May 16, 2021, in the final minutes of the final night of the nine-day launch window.
UAF professor Peter Delamere’s analysis of the experiment’s results was published Nov. 19 in Physics of Plasmas.
“The ...
Patience isn't a virtue; it's a coping mechanism
2024-12-20
Patience — like its corollary impatience — has always been a sort of “I know it when I see it” concept. And that didn’t sit well with UC Riverside psychology researcher Kate Sweeny.
“Philosophers and religious scholars call patience a virtue, yet most people claim to be impatient,” Sweeny said. “That made me wonder if maybe patience is less about being a good person and more about how we deal with day-to-day frustrations.”
For purposes of her research, Sweeny sought to better define what constitutes patience, and impatience, and the factors that determine them.
Impatience, ...
The Lancet Psychiatry: Autism spectrum disorder ranks among the top 10 causes of non-fatal health burden in youth
2024-12-20
A new global analysis reveals that an estimated 61.8 million people in 2021 were autistic —equivalent to 1 in every 127 individuals. Conducted as part of the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2021, the research identifies autism spectrum disorder (ASD) as one of the top ten causes of non-fatal health burden for youth under 20 years old.
Key findings reveal stark disparities: the global prevalence of ASD is significantly higher among males, at 1,065 cases per 100,000 males, almost double of global prevalence among females (508 per 100,000 females). Regions like High-Income ...
Innovative glue maker chosen for Japanese startup program
2024-12-20
The eco-friendly glue company D-Glue, co-created by a Cal Poly chemistry research team with student involvement in partnership with an East Coast company, has joined an international corporate incubator program as of Dec. 1.
Plug and Play, a global innovation platform that links startups, corporations, investors, universities and government agencies, has over 60 locations across the world, reaching across 25 industries. Plug and Play’s three-month international program matches startups with business investors among its 45 Japanese corporate ...
Digital labels can help grocers waste less food
2024-12-20
In 2022, U.S. grocers wasted 5 million tons of food, with 35% of it going to landfills, according to the food waste nonprofit ReFed. More than half of that waste — 2.7 million tons — was past the labels’ expiration dates.
But there’s a potential technological solution to the waste problem, according to new research from Texas McCombs. By moving from paper shelf labels to digital ones, supermarkets can easily lower prices and move older stock from their shelves to consumers’ homes.
Using technology to quickly change prices on labels, a process known as dynamic pricing, benefits more than just consumers, says Ioannis ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Modern AI systems have achieved Turing's vision, but not exactly how he hoped
Quantum walk computing unlocks new potential in quantum science and technology
Construction materials and household items are a part of a long-term carbon sink called the “technosphere”
First demonstration of quantum teleportation over busy Internet cables
Disparities and gaps in breast cancer screening for women ages 40 to 49
US tobacco 21 policies and potential mortality reductions by state
AI-driven approach reveals hidden hazards of chemical mixtures in rivers
Older age linked to increased complications after breast reconstruction
ESA and NASA satellites deliver first joint picture of Greenland Ice Sheet melting
Early detection model for pancreatic necrosis improves patient outcomes
Poor vascular health accelerates brain ageing
Chinese Medical Journal review provides insights into respiratory syncytial virus
Growing safer spuds: removing toxins from potatoes
Russia-Ukraine War’s unexpected casualties: Hungry people in distant nations
York U professor’s new paper challenges tokenizing women of colour in academia
Tiny antennas on cells offer new ALS insights
Geothermal aquifers offer green potential but quality checks required
Large Hadron Collider regularly makes magic
Functionality of a grapevine transport protein defined
Changes in store for atmospheric rivers
First results from 2021 rocket launch shed light on aurora’s birth
Patience isn't a virtue; it's a coping mechanism
The Lancet Psychiatry: Autism spectrum disorder ranks among the top 10 causes of non-fatal health burden in youth
Innovative glue maker chosen for Japanese startup program
Digital labels can help grocers waste less food
Clever trick to cook stars like Christmas puds detected for first time
By looking at individual atoms in tooth enamel, UW and PNNL researchers are learning what happens to our teeth as we age
Volunteers should not become friends with patients
Men and residents of higher crime areas see greater benefit from community parks, in reduction of deaths from heart disease
Getting rehab earlier improves concussion outcomes, OHSU study suggests
[Press-News.org] York U professor’s new paper challenges tokenizing women of colour in academiaAn accomplished Chinese Canadian academic in equity studies Assistant Professor Yvonne Su says embracing diversity must go beyond optics