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Track: Inspire Session
Track: Career Track
Marty Downs
LTER Network Office
Santa Barbara, CA, USA
Marty Downs
LTER Network Office
Santa Barbara, CA, USA
At their best, research and education networks can offer pathways into science for those who have historically been excluded from the field. They can make the customs and culture of a field visible and navigable for newcomers. They support large-scale networking and have the critical mass needed to make substantial changes to practice. But the same qualities that make them effective can present obstacles to developing a sense of belonging. Inertia develops around established practices. What feels like a close community to insiders, can look like an impassable obstacle to the uninitiated.
Bring your success stories and your cautionary tales. What has worked and what lessons have you learned around the role of networks in building belonging in ecology?
Presenting Author: Kari O'Connell – Oregon State University
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Presenting Author: Lindsey Rustad – USDA Forest Service
Presenting Author: Lauren L. Sullivan – University of Missouri
Presenting Author: Cora Baird – University of Virginia
Presenting Author: Rashidah Farid, Ph.D. – Dept. Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Tuskegee University
Presenting Author: Claudia Luke – Sonoma State University
Presenting Author: Frederick Abbott – Ecological Society of America