Challenges and supports for women conservation leaders

Abstract Leadership and inclusivity are increasingly recognized as fundamental to conservation success, yet women's leadership within the conservation profession is understudied. This study identifies gender‐related challenges women conservation leaders experienced in their careers, and support...

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Main Authors: Megan S. Jones, Jennifer Solomon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-06-01
Series:Conservation Science and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.36
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spelling doaj-bbc08f442c9f4ce48e45c0903450b7412020-11-25T01:06:31ZengWileyConservation Science and Practice2578-48542019-06-0116n/an/a10.1111/csp2.36Challenges and supports for women conservation leadersMegan S. Jones0Jennifer Solomon1Human Dimensions of Natural Resources Department Colorado State University Fort Collins ColoradoHuman Dimensions of Natural Resources Department Colorado State University Fort Collins ColoradoAbstract Leadership and inclusivity are increasingly recognized as fundamental to conservation success, yet women's leadership within the conservation profession is understudied. This study identifies gender‐related challenges women conservation leaders experienced in their careers, and supports helping them advance. Using an intersectionality framing to identify intersections between gender, race/ethnicity, age, and leadership position, we conducted and analyzed semi‐structured interviews with 56 women leaders in conservation organizations across the United States. All interviewees reported experiencing or witnessing a gender‐related workplace challenge in at least one of six categories, and the vast majority reported encountering four or more of these challenges: salary inequality and difficulty negotiating, formal exclusion, informal exclusion, harassment and inadequate organizational response, assumptions of inadequacy, and assumptions of wrongness. Participants also experienced two categories of supports: structural supports and supportive relationships. Women's experiences varied based on age, race and ethnicity, and leadership position. Our results indicate more effort is needed to identify effective strategies for making conservation a more inclusive, empowering, and appealing profession in which to work.https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.36conservationequitygenderinclusivityintersectionalityleadership
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Megan S. Jones
Jennifer Solomon
spellingShingle Megan S. Jones
Jennifer Solomon
Challenges and supports for women conservation leaders
Conservation Science and Practice
conservation
equity
gender
inclusivity
intersectionality
leadership
author_facet Megan S. Jones
Jennifer Solomon
author_sort Megan S. Jones
title Challenges and supports for women conservation leaders
title_short Challenges and supports for women conservation leaders
title_full Challenges and supports for women conservation leaders
title_fullStr Challenges and supports for women conservation leaders
title_full_unstemmed Challenges and supports for women conservation leaders
title_sort challenges and supports for women conservation leaders
publisher Wiley
series Conservation Science and Practice
issn 2578-4854
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Leadership and inclusivity are increasingly recognized as fundamental to conservation success, yet women's leadership within the conservation profession is understudied. This study identifies gender‐related challenges women conservation leaders experienced in their careers, and supports helping them advance. Using an intersectionality framing to identify intersections between gender, race/ethnicity, age, and leadership position, we conducted and analyzed semi‐structured interviews with 56 women leaders in conservation organizations across the United States. All interviewees reported experiencing or witnessing a gender‐related workplace challenge in at least one of six categories, and the vast majority reported encountering four or more of these challenges: salary inequality and difficulty negotiating, formal exclusion, informal exclusion, harassment and inadequate organizational response, assumptions of inadequacy, and assumptions of wrongness. Participants also experienced two categories of supports: structural supports and supportive relationships. Women's experiences varied based on age, race and ethnicity, and leadership position. Our results indicate more effort is needed to identify effective strategies for making conservation a more inclusive, empowering, and appealing profession in which to work.
topic conservation
equity
gender
inclusivity
intersectionality
leadership
url https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.36
work_keys_str_mv AT megansjones challengesandsupportsforwomenconservationleaders
AT jennifersolomon challengesandsupportsforwomenconservationleaders
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