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Has Anyone Cited A Woman?

For many researchers, citation is an important way of demonstrating our knowledge, acknowledging the sources of our ideas, and connecting with debates in our fields. Recent studies have highlighted the systematic under-citation of women and other marginalised groups in various fields.

In this talk, Sally discusses recent activities undertaken at Maastricht University to help students and colleagues develop tactics to address this problem.

This webinar was presented on Friday 7th October as part of DARIAH’s “Friday Frontiers’ webinar series.

Learning Outcomes

After viewing this video, learners will:

  • recognise the conscious and unconscious biases that can lead to under-citation of knowledge
  • understand how such under-citation of knowledge across genders can foster and reinforce systematic inequality
  • know what steps we can all take to address these inequalities and apply them to other instances of under-citation and inequality such as ethnicity and language.

Cite as

Sally Wyatt (2022). Has Anyone Cited A Woman? Version 1.0.0. DARIAH-Campus. [Webinar recording]. http://localhost:3000/id/MD-Ey-8OtAqXCG96wZdnQ

Reuse conditions

Resources hosted on DARIAH-Campus are subjects to the DARIAH-Campus Training Materials Reuse Charter

Full metadata

Title:
Has Anyone Cited A Woman?
Authors:
Sally Wyatt
Domain:
Social Sciences and Humanities
Language:
en
Published to DARIAH-Campus:
10/25/2022
Originally published:
10/24/2022
Content type:
Webinar recording
Licence:
CCBY 4.0
Sources:
DARIAH
Topics:
Feminism, Digital Source Criticism
Version:
1.0.0