posted on 2021-07-28, 07:11authored byJimena Grosso, Jessica Fratani, Gabriela Fontanarrosa, Mariana Chuliver, Ana Sofía Duport-Bru, Rosio Gabriela Schneider, María Dolores Casagranda, Daiana Paola Ferraro, Natalin Vicente, María José Salica, Laura Pereyra, Regina Gabriela Medina, Carla Bessa, Romina Semhan, Miriam Corina Vera
<p>The growing number of gender studies
encourages more refined analyzes and greater conceptualization of the
underlying processes of gender gap in science. In Herpetology, previous studies
have described gender disparities and a scrutiny of individual interactions may
help revealing the mechanisms modelling the global pattern. In this
contribution we modeled a co-authorship network, a previously unexplored
methodology for gender studies in this discipline, in addition to a broad and
classic bibliometric analysis of the discipline. Co-authorship networks were
modelled for two South American journals because this geo-political location is
considered to present the best gender balance within general scientific
communities. However, we found a pattern of male preferential connections (male
homophily) that marginalizes women and maintains the gender gap, at both
regional and global scales. This interpretation arises from results coming from
multiple analyses, such as high homophily index in collaboration networks,
lower female representation in articles than expected in a non-gender biased
environment, the decrease of female co-authors when the article leader is a
man, and the extreme masculinization of the editorial boards. The homophilic
dynamics of the publication process reveals that academic activity is pervasive
to unbalanced power relationships. Personal interactions shape the collective
experience, tracing back to the Feminist Theory’s axiom: “the personal is
political”.</p>