Gender diversity of editorial boards and gender differences in the peer review process at six journals of ecology and evolution
Open Access
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Type Journal Article
Year 2019
Language English
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Academic Writing & Publishing

Gender diversity of editorial boards and gender differences in the peer review process at six journals of ecology and evolution

Charles W. Fox , Meghan A. Duffy, Daphne J. Fairbairn, Jennifer A. Meyer
External / Open Access
2019 Ecology and Evolution DOI: 10.1002/ece3.5794

Abstract

Abstract Despite substantial progress for women in science, women remain underrepresented in many aspects of the scholarly publication process. We examined how the gender diversity of editors and reviewers changed over time for six journals in ecology and evolution (2003–2015 for four journals, 2007–2015 or 2009–2015 for the other two), and how several aspects of the peer review process differed between female and male editors and reviewers. We found that for five of the six journals, women were either absent or very poorly represented as handling editors at the beginning of our dataset. The representation of women increased gradually and consistently, with women making up 29% of the handling editors (averaged across journals) in 2015, similar to the representation of women as last authors on ecology papers (23% in 2015) but lower than the proportion of women among all authors (31%) and among members of the societies that own the journals (37%–40%). The proportion of women among reviewers has also gradually but consistently increased over time, reaching 27% by 2015. Female editors invited more female reviewers than did male editors, and this difference increased with age of the editor. Men and women who were invited to review did not differ in whether they responded to the review invitation, but, of those that responded, women were slightly more likely to agree to review. In contrast, women were less likely than men to accept invitations to serve on journal editorial boards. Our analyses indicate that there has been progress in the representation of women as reviewers and editors in ecology and evolutionary biology, but women are still underrepresented among the gatekeepers of scholarly publishing relative to their representation among researchers.
Full Title Gender diversity of editorial boards and gender differences in the peer review process at six journals of ecology and evolution
Primary Author Charles W. Fox
Co-Authors Meghan A. Duffy, Daphne J. Fairbairn, Jennifer A. Meyer
Publication Type Journal Article
Year 2019
Journal Ecology and Evolution
Volume / Issue Vol. 9, No. 24
Pages 13636–13649
Category Academic Writing & Publishing
Institution External / Open Access
Access Open Access
Added to Library March 24, 2026

Cite This Publication

APA
Charles W. Fox, Meghan A. Duffy, Daphne J. Fairbairn, Jennifer A. Meyer (2019). Gender diversity of editorial boards and gender differences in the peer review process at six journals of ecology and evolution. *Ecology and Evolution*, 9(24), 13636–13649.
MLA
Charles W. Fox. "Gender diversity of editorial boards and gender differences in the peer review process at six journals of ecology and evolution." *Ecology and Evolution*, vol. 9, no. 24, 2019, pp. 13636–13649.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5794