The following
joint Editorial was originally published
in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces (DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c10979).We confront the terrible
reality
that systemic racism and discrimination impacts the daily personal
and professional lives of many members of the scientific community
and broader society. In the U.S., the brutal killing of George Floyd
while in police custody is one of the most recent examples of the
centuries of systemic violence suffered by Black Americans. This moment
and its aftermath lay bare the legacies of racism and its exclusionary
practices.Let us be clear: we, the Editors, Staff, and Governance
Members
of ACS Publications condemn the tragic deaths of Black people and
stand in solidarity with Black members of the science and engineering
community. Moreover, ACS condemns racism, discrimination, and harassment
in all forms. We will not tolerate practices and viewpoints that exclude
or demean any member of our community. Despite these
good intentions, we recognize that our community has not done enough
to provide an environment for Black chemists to thrive.Rep.
Eddie Bernice Johnson, Chairwoman of the U.S. House Committee
on Science, Space, and Technology said, “So far, we have gotten
by with a STEM workforce that does not come close to representing
the diversity of our nation. However, if we continue to leave behind
so much of our nation’s brainpower, we cannot succeed.”[1] Indeed, the U.S. National Science Foundation
notes that Blacks and other under-represented minority groups continue
to be under-represented in science and engineering education and employment.[2] What is abundantly clear in this moment is that
this lack of representation is a symptom of systemic racism across
all levels of education and professional life. We know that supportive
words are not enough. We must develop and implement a concrete plan
for changing our trajectory.Publications and citations are
academic currency, and while we
like to think publishing a manuscript is “just about the science”,
we know that is not true for everyone. We have seen the biases (largely
through the lens of gender and in Western countries because of the
limitations in bibliometric analyses) and applaud our colleagues at
the RSC for their massive study that explored these gender barriers
in the publishing pipeline[3] and their recent
Inclusion and Diversity Framework.[4] At
the present time, unfortunately, less is known about the effects of
race and ethnicity on publishing success. A study published in PeerJ, however, found that unprofessional reviewer comments
had a disproportionate effect on authors from under-represented groups.[5]As the world’s leading society publisher,
we have a responsibility
to aggressively combat bias in all aspects of the publishing process,
including systemic under-representation of Blacks in this endeavor
(no ACS journal is currently led by a Black Editor-in-Chief). Within
ACS Publications, we actively track gender and geographic diversity
of editors, advisors, authors, and reviewers, and we anecdotally report
on race of editors. Diversity encompasses many more dimensions than
these, and we acknowledge that we can do much more than we have. We
affirm that diversity and inclusion strengthen the research community
and its impact, and we are committed to developing, implementing,
tracking, and reporting on our progress to ensure that our editors,
advisors, reviewers, and authors are more diverse and that all authors
receive the same fair treatment and opportunity to publish in our
journals. We acknowledge that we do not have all the answers now,
but we seek to hear from and listen to our community on how we can
improve our journals to be more diverse and inclusive. As first steps,
we commit to the taking the following actions:Gathering and making public our baseline statistics
on diversity within our journals, encompassing our editors, advisors,
reviewers, and authors; annually reporting on progressTraining new and existing editors to recognize and interrupt
bias in peer reviewIncluding diversity
of journal contributors as an explicit
measurement of Editor-in-Chief performanceAppointing an ombudsperson to serve as a liaison between
Editors and our CommunityDeveloping
an actionable diversity plan for each ACS
journalThese are only initial plans
and the start of a conversation: other
ideas are beginning to germinate, and we commit to sharing them with
you regularly. We invite you contribute your ideas on how we can do
better via our Axial website. We are listening carefully.We encourage you to take immediate
action in your own circles.
In a recent editorial, JACS Associate Editor Melanie
Sanford[6] offered practical steps to take
now. Take a moment to find out more about these actions and how to
bring them into your work and your life.We all have a responsibility
to eradicate racism and discrimination
in the science and engineering community; indeed, to make a real difference,
we need to be antiracist. The tragic events we have seen in the Black
community provide great urgency to this goal. The work will be difficult
and will force us to confront hard realities about our beliefs and
actions. We fully expect that you, and everyone in the community,
will hold us accountable.