The Gendered Conference Campaign: A Critique

Philosophia 43 (1):13-23 (2015)
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Abstract

The Gendered Conference Campaign seeks to reduce the prevalence of conferences at which the keynote speakers are all male. Such conferences, according to proponents of the campaign, stereotype philosophy as male, contribute to implicit bias against women and perpetuate stereotype threat. I argue, first, that if a more diverse list of keynote speakers were the correct way to counter harms such as implicit bias and stereotype threat, then a Gendered Conference Campaign would not be the solution. The campaign would need to include other groups that are the victims of implicit bias and stereotype within philosophy. Other challenges to proponents of the Gendered Conference Campaign are then presented

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David Benatar
University of Cape Town

References found in this work

The Second Sexism.David Benatar - 2003 - Social Theory and Practice 29 (2):177-210.

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