Cordilleran Section - 115th Annual Meeting - 2019

Paper No. 35-10
Presentation Time: 11:15 AM

USING SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS TO IDENTIFY INEQUITIES IN GEOSCIENCE


DAHL, Robyn Mieko, Department of Geology, Western Washington University, 516 High Street, Bellingham, WA 98225

Social network analysis (SNA) is a powerful tool for modeling communities. Because SNA allows for mapping of interactions at different scales, it can be used to examine individual relationships like collaborations and citation practices as well as institutional-scale practices like academic hiring networks. For example, by mapping demographic information like gender, race/ethnicity or first-generation status onto a network model, we can begin to explore how identity shapes an individual’s position with their research community. In this project, SNA is used to explore power and gatekeeping in academic hiring networks by mapping geoscience faculty placements at US academic institutions. The academic pathway of each individual in the analysis includes their current institution, PhD institution, and undergraduate institution. Modeling this network allows us to examine structural inequities such as the outsized influence of a limited number of graduate programs.