List of Scholarship Harassment references and resources.
References
- American Council on Education & PEN America (2023). Making the case for academic freedom and institutional autonomy in a challenging political environment: A resource guide for campus leaders.
- Andrezejewski, A. (2022, August 8). When students harass professors.
- Doerfler, P., Forte, A., De Cristofaro, E., Stringhini, G., Blackburn, J., & McCoy, D. (2021). 鈥淚'm a professor, which isn't usually a dangerous job鈥: Internet-facilitated harassment and its impact on researchers. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction, 5(CSCW2), 1-32.
- Marwick, A. E., Blackwell, L., & Lo, K. (2016). Best practices for conducting risky research and protecting yourself from online harassment (Data & Society Guide). New 91亚色: Data and Society Institute.
- Mattheis, A. A., & Kingdon, A. (2021). Does the institution have a plan for that? Researcher safety and the ethics of institutional responsibility. In A. Lavorgna & T. J. Holt (Eds.), Researching cybercrimes: Methodologies, ethics, and critical approaches (pp. 457-472). Palgrave Macmillan.
- Nogrady, B. (2024). Harassment of scientists is surging: Institutions aren鈥檛 sure how to help. Nature, 629(8013), 748-750.
- Shaw, S. M. (2020, December 7). When I was trolled, my institution got it right. Retrieved from
- Wright, J. M., Chun, W. H. K., Clarke, A., Herder, M., & Ramos, H. (2022). Protecting expert advice for the public: Promoting safety and improved communications. Royal Society of Canada.
Resources
- (diverse digital security threats; RaReNet & CiviCERT)
- (online harassment; Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health)
- (PEN America)
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