All,
So, a bit of time has passed but below are the few responses I got to my 
request about how to ensure you generate an inclusive pool for a search. 
Honestly, my sense is that we could all strengthen our game a bit.  Maybe 
someone wants to create a webpage on “Increasing the Diversity of Job Applicant 
Pools in Environmental Politics and Environmental Studies” or something like 
that? As a soon-retiree, I won’t be doing that but if others want to… One could 
start with these below, removing the suggesters names.
With smiling encouragement, I urge us all to go the extra mile on these things 
… it’s the only way we will make progress on diversity (before we burn up the 
whole planet with climate change).
Always optimistically 😊
Ron

  *   Rachael Schwom: Environmental sociologists 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
  *   Sikina Jinnah: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
  *   Sikina Jinnah notes: “Attracting a diverse pool is only the first step. 
Framing of the job description to attract underrepresented candidates, 
reviewing applications to avoid implicit bias and select for attributes that 
bring inclusive culture, and interview procedures that do the same matter a lot 
as well.”
  *   Jonathan Rosenberg: pointed me to the attached, “A Guide to Recruiting 
Native American Employees and Students at Tribal Colleges and Universities” but 
with particular links for posting jobs;
     *   Native American and Indigenous Studies 
Association<https://www.naisa.org/postings/job-postings/>
     *   Tribal College: Journal of American Indian Higher 
Education<https://jobs.tribalcollegejournal.org/jobs/>
        *   The American Indian Higher Education 
Consortium<http://www.aihec.org/> was founded in 1973 and now consists of 37 
Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs) in the United States.
     *   National Indian Education 
Association<https://www.niea.org/other-positions-in-native-education>
     *   National Congress of American 
Indians<https://www.ncai.org/resources/job-listings>
     *   Native Hire<https://www.nativehire.org/>
     *   Native Americans in Academia<https://nativeamericansinacademia.com/>
     *   Native Americans in Higher 
Ed<https://www.nativeamericansinhighered.com/>
     *   H-Net<https://www.h-net.org/jobs/job_browse.php> (Humanities and 
Social Sciences Online)
     *   TribalNet<https://www.tribalhub.com/tribalnet/> (“THE platform to 
connect and seek opportunities in solutions, best practices and technology 
among tribal gaming, government and healthcare”)
        *   TribalNet is a division of TribalHub<https://www.tribalhub.com/>, 
which also includes TribalWise- dedicated to training and education; 
TribalValue- the partner and solution platform; TribalFocus- a consulting and 
management service provider.

  *   Women in Conflict Studies (run by Ashley Leeds) has a great list serve 
for announcing jobs.
  *   “ I think WICS is your best bet if it’s an IR search. I know a lot of 
people tag POCalsoknow and womenalsoknow on twitter, but (I have since learned 
after making this mistake myself) those accounts don’t retweet job ads. 
Announce on social media with a special note that you are particularly 
interested in seeing applications from scholars of color - those kinds of 
announcements often get shared/retweeted. I’m pretty confident that scholars of 
color access ejobs just like everyone else. So the thing to do is legwork - 
your friend needs to figure out who might be a good candidate, reach out to 
them, and strongly encourage them to apply.”
  *   Ron: in my case, we were looking for a social scientist working on fire 
and there happened to be an article on “top female researchers working on fire” 
that had been published a few years back. I googled the 150 women on that list 
and put together a list of their emails and we plan to email all of them 
directly. I thought this would take forever – it took less than 1.5 hours and I 
got emails for over 120 women right away.  The point here is that its really 
not that much time to do something like this and, I hope it will help increase 
the pool’s diversity.

Ronald Mitchell, Professor
Department of Political Science and Program in Environmental Studies
University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403-1284
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
https://rmitchel.uoregon.edu/
IEA Database Director: https://iea.uoregon.edu/

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gep-ed" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/gep-ed/SJ0PR10MB55836C269671AE8E0A2EDD4ACB659%40SJ0PR10MB5583.namprd10.prod.outlook.com.

Reply via email to