Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

Report identifies factors associated with harassment, abuse in academic fieldwork

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — College students considering careers in fields like archaeology or geology that require extensive work at remote field sites might want to find out how potential supervisors and advisers conduct themselves in the field. Do they establish clear ground rules for the behavior of everyone on the team? Are the rules consistently enforced? According to a new report, such factors likely influence whether students will witness or experience harassment while working far from home.

The new study draws on interviews conducted as part of a survey of hundreds of students who reported on their field-research experiences in the life, physical and social sciences. The larger study, reported in 2014 in the journal PLOS ONE, found that 59 percent of respondents had experienced sexual harassment at field sites and 19 percent had been sexually assaulted. The new analysis takes a qualitative look at interviews conducted with a random sample of 26 of the respondents who were willing to be interviewed.

“These interviewees, both men and women, shared positive and negative field experiences that deeply shaped them as scientists and as people,” said University of Illinois anthropology professor Kate Clancy, who conducted the research with Julienne Rutherford, of the University of Illinois at Chicago; Robin Nelson, of Santa Clara University; and Katie Hinde, of Arizona State University. “Many of the scientists we interviewed revealed a real lack of clarity in what constituted appropriate professional conduct, because the field site would have no rules or the rules wouldn’t be enforced, or the director himself or herself would be a perpetrator of psychological abuse or sexual violence,” Clancy said.

The new study, reported in the journal American Anthropologist, found that field site directors who failed to establish clear ground rules for the behavior of their team also were more likely to tolerate, ignore – or in some cases, engage in and encourage – the physical and/or sexual harassment of some members of their team.

According to interviewees who had had positive fieldwork experiences, site directors who set clear guidelines for behavior and stressed the importance of mutual support among team members created a positive work environment for everyone on their team. Such leaders also tended to make themselves accessible to even the most junior members of their team, and made a special effort to include and accommodate those with physical or other limitations.

“Science is not just the samples and data, it is also the people and process,” Hinde said.

Abusive site directors often undermined their targets’ educational goals by giving them less-desirable tasks – housekeeping or cooking chores for female, but not male, team members, for example – and denying them access to activities that would enhance their research-related experience and understanding, the interviews revealed.

“People who had negative experiences in the field often felt isolated and undermined by their perpetrators, so that their contributions to the projects were diminished or attributed to someone else,” Rutherford said.

Some site directors also limited team members’ access to food, water or the opportunity to empty their bladders.

“Some of the targets of these actions said they felt vulnerable, powerless, isolated or ‘like prey.’ In the fieldwork setting, there’s often nowhere to go to avoid your harasser,” Rutherford said. “Many respondents described trying, unsuccessfully, to prevent or deflect the abuse. The power of the people in charge puts the onus on them, not the targets, to improve conditions.”

Julienne Rutherford.

Julienne Rutherford is a co-author on a new report about student safety at study sites.

The new analysis offers a few guidelines for those hoping to design field studies that benefit everyone on the team, Nelson said.

“As a community, we must prioritize the inclusion and safety of members of our research team,” she said. “At a minimum, this includes creating and enforcing codes of conduct. Those with the least professional power should not have to risk their own physical and emotional safety to engage in these important educational opportunities.”

Funders for this work include the National Institutes of Health Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women’s Health Program, the Illinois Center for Advanced Study Beckman Fellowship, and the Illinois Leadership Center Faculty Fellowship at the U. of I.

Clancy also is affiliated with the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the U. of I.

Editor’s notes:                                                                                     

To reach Kate Clancy, call 217-244-1509; email kclancy@illinois.edu.
To reach Robin G. Nelson, call 408-554-6884; email rnelson@scu.edu.
To reach Katie Hinde, call 480-727-4000; email katie.hinde@asu.edu.
To reach Julienne Rutherford, call 773-398-9265; email ruther4d@uic.edu.
The paper “Signaling safety: Characterizing fieldwork experiences and their implications for career trajectories” is available online and from the U. of I. News Bureau.
DOI: 10.1111/aman.12929                                                              

 

Read Next

Health and medicine Dr. Timothy Fan, left, sits in a consulting room with the pet owner. Between them stands the dog, who is looking off toward Fan.

How are veterinarians advancing cancer research in dogs, people?

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — People are beginning to realize that dogs share a lot more with humans than just their homes and habits. Some spontaneously occurring cancers in dogs are genetically very similar to those in people and respond to treatment in similar ways. This means inventive new treatments in dogs, when effective, may also be […]

Honors From left, individuals awarded the 2025 Campus Awards for Excellence in Public Engagement are Antoinette Burton, director of the Humanities Research Institute; Ariana Mizan, undergraduate student in strategy, innovation and entrepreneurship; Lee Ragsdale, the reentry resource program director for the Education Justice Project; and Ananya Yammanuru, a graduate student in computer science. Photos provided.

Awards recognize excellence in public engagement

The 2025 Campus Awards for Excellence in Public Engagement were recently awarded to faculty, staff and community members who address critical societal issues.

Uncategorized Portrait of the researchers standing outside in front of a grove of trees.

Study links influenza A viral infection to microbiome, brain gene expression changes

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — In a study of newborn piglets, infection with influenza A was associated with disruptions in the piglets’ nasal and gut microbiomes and with potentially detrimental changes in gene activity in the hippocampus, a brain structure that plays a central role in learning and memory. Maternal vaccination against the virus during pregnancy appeared […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010