(Credit: Jenny Nuss, Berkeley Lab)

All seventeen U.S. national laboratories and many prominent publishers, journals, and other organizations in scientific publishing announced today the beginning of a partnership to support name change requests from researchers on past published papers. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) is coordinating the effort.

This agreement will allow researchers who wish to change their names to more easily claim work from all stages of their careers; it specifically addresses the administrative and emotional difficulties some transgender researchers have experienced when requesting name changes associated with past academic work.

“We are supporting our colleagues on an important issue that is often taken for granted — allowing them to take full credit for their academic achievements with their name,” said Joerg Heber, Research Integrity Officer, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. “It could not happen without our partners at the other national labs and in publishing. We’re grateful to be working in concert on this — it’s never been done before.”

Listen to the special podcast featuring Amalie Trewartha, Lady Idos, and Joerg Heber.

Previously, individual researchers shouldered the burden, administratively and emotionally, of initiating name change requests with each publisher of their past papers. This partnership streamlines these previously ad hoc processes and offers an official validation mechanism to all involved by enabling researchers to ask their respective institutions to pursue name changes on their behalf directly with the publishers and journals.  Many publishers have been independently updating their own policies to address an increasing number of name change requests.

We are very happy to see the National Laboratories being proactive in supporting their researchers with this initiative, which will be well used. Since we updated our own author name change policy in December 2020 we have had requests for name changes on dozens of articles in our journals,” said Nicola Nugent, Publishing Manager Quality & Ethics, from the Royal Society of Chemistry. “It truly takes a collaborative effort to achieve positive change on inclusion and diversity in scholarly publishing – something we have seen through our work with 42 publishers in our Joint Commitment on Inclusion and Diversity in Publishing.”

“arXiv’s mission is to open science for everyone, because science can only be enriched by diversity,” said Dr. Eleonora Presani, Executive Director of arXiv, an open-access distribution service of Cornell Tech with more than two million scholarly articles across eight different disciplines. “To advance this mission, arXiv’s policy empowers authors to be in control of their names and online identities, and we’re excited to partner with other organizations to better facilitate name changes with less burden on researchers.”

For researchers of all genders, and transgender researchers specifically, the new process ensures they can rightfully claim ownership of prior work without fear of reprisal under their lived name and be known in their respective fields primarily through their merits as published authors.

“As a trans scientist, having publications under my birth name causes me to have mixed feelings about past work of which I’m otherwise proud,” said Amalie Trewartha, Research Scientist, Toyota Research Institute and Materials Science Research Affiliate, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. “I am faced with the dilemma of either hiding certain parts of it, or outing myself. Having my name updated on my previous publications would be enormously meaningful. It would allow me to make a first impression on my peers primarily through my merits as a scientist and it would allow me to unreservedly embrace and be proud of research from all stages of my career.”

As several researchers have attested, having their names updated on previous publications allows them to best represent their full suite of accomplishments. The ability to claim the volume of their work over time has significant implications for maintaining prominence in their area of research and for receiving credit for their academic impact.

“We know authors change their name for a variety of reasons, and this can negatively impact their ownership of their research – an impact that is particularly severe for transgender researchers,” said the Royal Society of Chemistry’s Nugent.

The partnership between the national laboratories, major scientific publishers, journals, and other organizations represents a commitment to creating a more inclusive culture in STEM fields and STEM publishing in particular. The participating national laboratories will facilitate requests for name changes for any reason, including religious, marital, or other purposes, where supported by the policies in place at our publishing partners.

“This partnership shows the power of scientific collaboration – not only to move the world forward with new discoveries, but also to drive inclusivity with impact,” said Judy Verses, Executive Vice President, Wiley Research. “Publishers have a multiplier effect when driving these positive changes, which impact the entire knowledge ecosystem – including the more than 16 million researchers Wiley serves.”

“I’m proud of the support and innovation at the national labs and the enthusiasm on the part of the publishers, at this level of commitment, to improve people’s lives,” said Lady Idos, Chief Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Officer, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. “This change eliminates an enormous burden on researchers, emotionally and administratively, to correct the record. Our partnership on this is a continuation of the efforts that many national labs have initiated to create a more welcoming and inclusive work environment for trans researchers. I encourage others to join us.”

The seventeen national laboratories across the United States are pursuing this work in alignment with their respective diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives, not as a result of any federal policy changes, and welcome new partners as the effort advances.

LIST OF 34 PARTICIPATING INSTITUTIONS

17 Publishing Organizations & Services
American Chemical Society
American Physical Society
American Society for Microbiology
arXiv
Clarivate
eLife
Elsevier
Hindawi
Royal Society of Chemistry
protocols.io
Science Journals – American Association for the Advancement of Science
Scopus
Springer Nature
Wiley
American Meteorological Society
American Nuclear Society
SAGE Publishing

17 National Laboratories
Ames National Laboratory
Argonne National Laboratory
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Idaho National Laboratory
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab name change resources for published research)
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Los Alamos National Laboratory
National Energy Technology Laboratory
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
Sandia National Laboratories
Savannah River National Laboratory
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility

###

Founded in 1931 on the belief that the biggest scientific challenges are best addressed by teams, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and its scientists have been recognized with 14 Nobel Prizes. Today, Berkeley Lab researchers develop sustainable energy and environmental solutions, create useful new materials, advance the frontiers of computing, and probe the mysteries of life, matter, and the universe. Scientists from around the world rely on the Lab’s facilities for their own discovery science. Berkeley Lab is a multiprogram national laboratory, managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.

DOE’s Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit energy.gov/science.