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Sarah Simeonoff and Gabi Perry Co-Author Article in Advances in Archaeological Practice

Gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, age, and archaeological sector of respondents.

Sarah Simeonoff and Gabi Perry (Archaeology, PhD Candidates) have co-authored a new study titled "Tough Enough: Preliminary Survey Results on Field Experiences in Archaeology." The Society for American Archaeology (Advances in Archaeological Practice) has designated the article as their Paper of the Month.

Abstract
This article examines field experiences across archaeological sectors and demographics through the results of a survey aimed at understanding how the culture of toughness is manifest in archaeological fieldwork through the prevalence of discrimination and pressure to accept inappropriate behaviors and to push oneself physically, mentally, and emotionally. We selected these particular behaviors as they demonstrate ways in which archaeologists perceive expectations and how individuals prove they can endure, that they are tough enough. Our survey data demonstrate that women, noncisgendered, and entry-level archaeologists are the most vulnerable to negative experiences, that the pressure to push beyond one’s limits is universal, and that discrimination and harassment are factors increasingly considered by women as they decide whether to continue in the profession. We argue that many of these rules and social conditions are created and maintained inconspicuously through performative informality which is linked to the discipline’s culture of toughness. Through analysis of our quantitative survey results, we discuss how archaeology’s work culture shapes experiences in the industry and examine avenues for reform to promote equity in archaeology.

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