How
to cite: Mandoli, DF 2008 The Bioethics Imperative XXXV
Gender Discrimination Cases from NSF
ASPB News. July/August 2008, 35(4): 29-30
http://www.aspb.org/newsletter/jul/aug08/07mandoli35.cfm |
BIOETHICS
The
Bioethics Imperative XXXV
Gender Discrimination Cases from NSF
Mokita:
The truth we all know and agree not to talk about. Papua New
Guinea
In TBI
XXXIII and XXXIV we dealt
with several sexual harassment cases from the National Science Foundation
(NSF), the last of which was egregious. Here, I discuss two gender discrimination
cases from the case closeout documents I received under the auspices of
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) from NSF. After the cases are described
in italics, the comments follow describing the outcome of each case based
on information in the closeout documents. Before we look at the cases,
lets examine what sets the stage for gender discrimination.
Math, science, and
engineering, the so-called MSE group, have traditionally been male dominated.
The bias remains in favor of men even now, despite the fact that young
women have equal if not better aptitude for these fields. Why do women
fail to persist in MSE? In a study of 80 undergraduates, Park et al. (1)
used a computer test, the Implicit Association Test (IAT), to measure
identification with MSE, gender stereotypes regarding MSE, and attitudes
toward MSE on an implicit, nonconscious level. They found that women
identified less strongly with MSE (men more strongly identified
MSE with themselves than did women) and that there was a persistent
attitude that the MSE fields were male fields. Men bought
into the gender stereotype more strongly than did women. In a second study
from the Greenwald group (2), Nosek et al. found that men identified with
math but that women identified with their selves, hence the catchy title
to their article: Math = Male, Me = Female, Therefore Math ? Me.
This phenomenon made it hard for the women in the study to identify themselves
as mathematically competent or as mathematicians.
This then sets the
stage for gender discrimination in science. The prevalence of men in MSE
and the implicit attitudes of both sexes make cases of gender discrimination
understandable, albeit undesirable. Lets look at the two cases that
NSF dealt with from 1989 to 2000.
Case M94070026.
(p. 108/109). Agency X concluded that complaints brought by three complainants
raised issues of gender discrimination that fell within its jurisdiction.
Induced among the allegation X addressed as gender discrimination were
allegations that the subject had discriminated in allocating access to
research equipment and had destroyed data belonging to another scientist.
After further investigation, X and the institute agreed on a settlement
stipulating that the institute would improve its procedures for handling
complaints of gender discrimination, remove the subject from his position
as director of the facilities for three months, take steps to protect
the interests of women whom the subject had allegedly harmed, and promise
that neither the Institute nor its employees would retaliate against the
people who raised complaints to X. The outlines of the settlement were
reported in the science press. Complainant #1 was not happy with
this outcome and asked if NSF and Agency X could do anything to
protect women like the three complainants.
NSF decided that since
another government agency had ruled on this matter, it would be unfair
to rule on the same matter twice. OIG, with the consent of complainant
#1, notified the program director that complainant #1 was concerned about
the possible future restrictions on her access to data at the Institute
that would adversely affect her ability to perform her work under her
NSF awards. OIG informed the program director that he was free to take
appropriate action that, in his judgment, would help complainant #1 get
appropriate access to the facilitys data and facilitate achievement
of the goals of NSFs award. OIG also reminded the program director
that he should refer any allegation of misconduct in science arising out
of this situation to OIG.
Case M94120042.
(p. 53). A complainant alleged that, because she was a woman and
because she complained of gender discrimination, the grantee university
engaged in a widespread program of persistent retaliation and harassment
against her. As instances of this program, she cited the universitys
actions to deprive her of the office and research materials at the
museum
, deprive her of laboratory space of her own at the department
, delay authorizing necessary grant-related expenditures, and transfer
grant funds to the PIs employer after the complainant was laid off
from her university job.
The OIG concluded
that the alleged gender discrimination would be appropriately considered
by a state government agency specializing in gender discrimination to
which the complainant had already appealed. NSFs regulation
on misconduct in science and engineering includes retaliation of
any kind against a person who reported or provided information about suspected
or alleged misconduct and who has not acted in bad faith as part
of the definition of misconduct. Because the grantee institutions
alleged retaliation was allegedly occasioned by a complaint of gender
discrimination, and did not raise issues of misconduct in science, it
does not fall within the definition. In other words, this case was
not pursued because (a) generally speaking, discrimination allegations
do not fall under the purview of the Inspector General, and (b) the retaliation
complaint was not a direct result of reporting an allegation of research
misconduct and therefore could not be investigated under the jurisdiction
of the agencys research misconduct regulation.
To ferret out the
truth in such a situation, it would be important to know if and in what
context other women in the department had experienced gender discrimination
and to have documentation that supported those statements.
So we see that for
technical reasons, NSF did not play any role in settling the claims of
gender discrimination in either of these two cases. Indeed, the implication
of the last case is that because NSF/OIG focuses primarily on allegations
of scientific misconduct and civil/criminal cases, it will rarely help
to investigate in alleged gender discrimination. In both cases, the university
or a state government authority intervened. If you find yourself in a
situation of gender discrimination, your first line of defense is with
your local institutions equal employment office and possibly the
state equal employment office. The key with any discrimination case is
documentation. Without it, cases are often reduced to he said, she
said, which are difficult at best to investigate adequately.
Dina Mandoli
dina.mandoli@gmail.com
Next Time:
The close of TBI
References
- Park, Lora E.,
Kathleen E. Cook, and Anthony G. Greenwald. 2001. Implicit indicators
of womens persistence in math, science and engineering. Psi
Chi Journal of Undergraduate Research, 6:145152.
- Nosek, Brian, A.
Mahzarin, R. Banaji, and Anthony G. Greenwald. 2002. Math = Male, Me
= Female, Therefore Math ? Me. Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 83(1):4459.
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