When paleontologist Riley Black learned that several scientists in her field had appeared in the Epstein files, she wasn’t remotely shocked.

The files have revealed the extent of the late disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein’s connections not only with powerful politicians and business leaders, but also hundreds of scientists, some of whom accepted funding from him long after his 2008 conviction on soliciting prostitution with a minor.

As the paleontology community reckons with the fallout of these revelations, women in the field say they are a symptom of a deeper misogyny and power imbalance in the field.

CBC spoke to several women in paleontology, both on and off the record, who describe navigating spaces where abuse and harassment are rampant, funding and fame are prioritized above all else and institutions protect established men at the top at the expense of younger women trying to build careers.

  • Velma@lemmy.today
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    2 days ago

    I am shocked, shocked! that the science and academia fields are full of misogynistic pedophiles even after years and decades and centuries of similar stories told by women over and over and over and over again. Shocking I tell you!

      • Velma@lemmy.today
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        2 days ago

        Nobel laureate Daniel Carleton Gajdusek pleaded guilty to two counts of child abuse yesterday. Gajdusek, 73, who is currently free on $350,000 bail, is expected to serve a jail term of between 9 months and 1 year and be on probation for 5 years. Sentencing is set for 29 April. According to a plea bargain entered yesterday in the Frederick County Circuit Court in Maryland, he will be allowed to conduct virus research overseas as soon as he finishes serving his sentence. In most cases, a person cannot travel for extended periods during probation.

        Oh goody, he only got jailed for 1 year and given all sorts of special privileges, too.