Shardé M. Davis Explained

Shardé M. Davis
Education:University of California, Santa Barbara (BA Communication, MA Communication);

University of Iowa (Ph.D. in Communication Studies and a doctoral certificate in Gender, Women's, and Sexuality Studies)

Occupation:academic

Shardé M. Davis is an Afro-American academic who created the hashtag #BlackintheIvory, which was popularised on Twitter in the wake of widespread protests following the murder of George Floyd.[1] [2]

Early life

As an undergraduate, Davis attended the University of California, Santa Barbara, where she earned a B.A. in Communication and Feminist Studies and an M.A. in Communication.[3] At UCSB she was funded through the Ronald E. McNair Scholars Program, and awarded the Steven H. Chaffee Undergraduate Research Award from the Department of Communication. She completed her Ph.D. in Communication with a doctoral certificate in Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Iowa.

Career

Davis is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication and a faculty affiliate of the Africana Studies Institute and the Institute for Collaboration on Health, Intervention, and Policy (InCHIP) at the University of Connecticut. She specializes in interpersonal communication, with a focus on "how Black women's complex identities - and the power laden social structures that shape them - influence the way they communicate with close others". Additionally, her research investigates "communication behaviour of other marginalized groups, like the elderly, people of color, financially-strained families, and divorcing couples". These ideas have been published in over 30 peer-refereed articles and invited book chapters,[4] and are best represented in her article, "The 'Strong Black Woman Collective': A Developing Theoretical Framework for Understanding Collective Communication Practices of Black Women".[5] Her research was formally recognized with the 2018 American Postdoctoral Fellowship from the American Association of University Women and the 2019 Ford Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship.[6]

#BlackintheIvory

in June 2020, Davis established the hashtag #BlackintheIvory with her friend Joy Woods, a doctoral student at the University of Texas-Austin.[7] The hashtag, used on Twitter, was designed as a forum to amplify the voices of "Blackademics" to speak truth about racism in academia.[8] [9] Woods first used the hashtag on Twitter, tweeting:Subsequently, it went viral in the United States and across the world,[10] [11] with Times Higher Education identifying it as a "tidal wave" of "black scholars" sharing their "lived experiences of discrimination and alienation" at higher educational institutions.[12] As of November 11, 2020, the account had 9,864 followers.[13] Since creating #BlackintheIvory, Davis has been featured in several media interviews and podcasts to share her views on the intersections of racial and academic identity.

Awards and honors

Selected publications

References

  1. Subbaraman. Nidhi. 2020-06-11. How #BlackInTheIvory put a spotlight on racism in academia. Nature. en. 582. 7812. 327. 10.1038/d41586-020-01741-7. 32546868. 2020Natur.582..327S.
  2. Web site: Fern. Deirdre. June 27, 2020.
    1. BlackintheIvory: a hashtag that became a rallying cry for Black academics - The Boston Globe
    . 2020-11-11. BostonGlobe.com.
  3. Web site: Davis. Shardé M.. 2019-11-22. Shardé M. Davis Department of Communication. 2020-11-10. en-US.
  4. Web site: Dr. Shardé M. Davis. 2020-11-10. scholar.google.com.
  5. Davis. Shardé M.. 2015-01-02. The "Strong Black Woman Collective": A Developing Theoretical Framework for Understanding Collective Communication Practices of Black Women. Women's Studies in Communication. 38. 1. 20–35. 10.1080/07491409.2014.953714. 142987582. 0749-1409.
  6. Web site: A Spotlight on Dr Shardé M. Davis. 2020-11-11. Canterbury Christ Church University. en.
  7. Web site: 2020-06-16. "The Rose-Colored Glasses Are Off:" #BlackintheIvory Creators Say Universities Can No Longer Ignore The Struggles Of Blacks In Academia. 2020-11-10. MadameNoire.
  8. Web site: Community Dialogues: Dr. Shardé M. Davis WFUV. 2020-11-10. wfuv.org.
  9. Junior. Nyasha. 2020.
    1. BlackInTheIvory Documents Anti-Blackness in the Academy
    . Women in Higher Education. en. 29. 9. 8–15. 10.1002/whe.20892. 225328166 . 2331-5466.
  10. Web site: 2020-06-19. UConn Professor's Hashtag Goes Viral In Fight Against Racism. 2020-11-10. UConn Today. en-US.
  11. Web site: Black women create #BlackInTheIvory and #PublishingPaidMe to reveal inequity in academia and publishing. 2020-11-10. NBC News. 8 June 2020 . en.
  12. Web site: 2020-06-21. 'I Was Fed Up': How #BlackInTheIvory Got Started, and What Its Founders Want to See Next - The Chronicle of Higher Education. 2020-11-10. https://web.archive.org/web/20200621140220/https://www.chronicle.com/article/I-Was-Fed-Up-How/248955/. 2020-06-21.
  13. Web site: @BlackInTheIvory. Black In The Ivory. 2020-11-11. Twitter. en.
  14. Web site: afampov. 2018-03-02. 100 WOMEN OF COLOR GALA & AWARDS. 2020-11-10. Af-Am Point of View. en-US.
  15. Web site: 2020. Golden Anniversary Monograph Awards. National Communication Association.