I think that the idea of curation in the cause of diversity and
balance is a good one.
At this year's Internet Librarian, folks were, for the first time in
my memory, taking note that the ratio of men to women among speakers
was pretty much the inverse of the ratio of attendees,
Cary
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 3:20 PM, Kelley McGrath <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> I'll second the idea of approaching people individually and explicitly asking them to participate. It worked on me. I never would have written my first article for the Code4Lib Journal or become a member of the editorial committee if someone hadn't encouraged me individually (Thanks Jonathan!).
>
> It would also be good to find a way to somehow target the pool of lurkers who maybe aren't already connected to someone and get them more involved.
>
> As far as anonymous proposals go, we recently had a very good workshop on implicit bias here. Someone brought up that found significant changes in the gender proportions in symphony orchestras after candidates started auditioning behind screens. There are also lots of studies about the different responses to the same resume/application depending on whether a stereotypically male/female or white/black name was used. Probably it's impossible to make proposals completely anonymous, but it would be an interesting experiment to leave off the names.
>
> Kelley
>
> PS Interestingly, I wouldn't instinctively self-identify as a member of the Code4Lib community, although my first thought is that that has more to do with not being a coder than with being a woman.
>
>
> **************************
> Kelley McGrath
> Metadata Management Librarian
> University of Oregon Libraries
> 1299 University of Oregon
> Eugene, OR 97403
>
> 541-346-8232
> [log in to unmask]
--
Cary Gordon
The Cherry Hill Company
http://chillco.com
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