![Drawing of two black birds with yellow and white patches perched, mirroring each other, on grass blades against a star-spangled black backdrop and abstract lines.](https://media.audubon.org/2023-09/KFurlongAudubon.jpg?width=306&height=195&auto=webp&quality=10&fit=crop&enable=upscale&blur=100)
In her piece “I’ll See You When I Get There,” artist Kirsten Furlong uses ink and acrylic to capture the birds’ seemingly magical journeys.
Vice President and Chief Scientist
Senior Director, Climate & Community Science
Senior Manager, Migration Ecology
Senior Director, Migratory Bird Initiative
Community Science Manager
Project Coordinator
Director, Spatial Conservation Planning
Boreal Conservation Specialist
Director, Conservation Social Science
Director, Community Science
GIS and Data Science Specialist
Director, Christmas Bird Count
Spatial Ecologist
Senior Manager, Quantitative Science
Director, Quantitative Science
Spatial Ecologist
Specialist, Climate Science
Senior Manager, Quantitative Science
Director of Migration Science, Migratory Bird Initiative, National Audubon Society
Director, Digital Science & Data Products
Senior Coordinator, Avian Biology
We aspire to practice translational ecology whenever possible and believe, through our collective experience, that the best science is produced in collaboration with diverse stakeholders. This includes our commitment to equity, diversity and inclusion.
Western science, as a discipline, has a long history of marginalizing those who are Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC), profiting from colonialism, contributing to discrimination, rewarding patriarchal structures, and promoting white supremacy culture. A lack of representation, blatant inequities, and burdens placed on minority scientists to fix diversity and inclusion issues are the norm within the scientific community. Many of us on the national science team have arrived at where we are today because we were privileged by our race, gender, sexual orientation, economic status, or other identities aligned with dominant culture.
Acknowledging these truths, Audubon is working to create a professional culture that is equitable and inclusive, recognizes the value of diverse backgrounds and viewpoints, celebrates and embraces our differences, and fosters belonging within our organization and the broader scientific community. We will consider the impacts, both intentional and unintentional, of our science on communities of marginalized identities, investigate white supremacy in science, welcome difficult conversations, and evolve to consider the human dimensions of conservation in our work. In doing so, we will work to ensure that our conservation efforts benefit both birds and people.
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