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January 11, 2024

How diverse are US ocean science institutions?

Trends are indicated in the three focal areas by (a) total US citizens, White US citizens, and non-White US citizens (2011–2021) and (b) total number and women (2007–2021), with academic positions for total and women divided into five categories. Symbols indicate significant trends: * = downtrend. # = uptrend. Credit: Oceanography (2023). DOI: 10.5670/oceanog.2024.134
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Trends are indicated in the three focal areas by (a) total US citizens, White US citizens, and non-White US citizens (2011–2021) and (b) total number and women (2007–2021), with academic positions for total and women divided into five categories. Symbols indicate significant trends: * = downtrend. # = uptrend. Credit: Oceanography (2023). DOI: 10.5670/oceanog.2024.134

A paper Dec. 19 in Oceanography examines whether U.S. ocean science institutions are recruiting and retaining the diverse cadre of talent needed to address climate change, food security, sustainable development, and other pressing global challenges.

From 2007 to 2021, the nonprofit Consortium for Ocean Leadership (COL) invited 55 U.S. universities and colleges, including Stanford, to submit graduate student and faculty demographics. On average, 26 institutions reported gender data each year and reported racial data starting in 2011.

"The data are clear: While institutions have increased recruitment of underrepresented U.S. citizens into graduate programs, we need to do a better job of supporting them through graduation," said lead author Staci Lewis, an Early Career Fellow at the Stanford Center for Ocean Solutions and former Senior Policy Manager at COL, which dissolved in 2022. "Science is stronger when it incorporates and perspectives. Indeed, it's the only way we'll build the equitable and sustainable ocean and climate solutions we need for the future."

The responding institutions reported and student recruitment and retention for seven subdisciplines of ocean science: marine policy, , marine chemistry, marine geology, ocean engineering, physical oceanography, and other like ocean conservation and coastal and estuarine studies. Only ocean engineering has consistently grown in enrollment.

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Findings:

More information: Staci Lewis et al, Assessing Diversity in US Ocean Science Institutions: Insights from Fifteen Years (2007–2021) of OSER Data, Oceanography (2023).

Journal information: Oceanography

Provided by Stanford University

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