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Three recommended inclusive language guidelines for scholarly publishing: Words matter
Authors:Sabrina J Ashwell  Patricia K Baskin  Stacy L Christiansen  Sara A DiBari  Annette Flanagin  Tracy Frey  Racquel Jemison  Mia Ricci
Institution:1. Chemical & Engineering News, American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, USA;2. American Academy of Neurology, Minneapolis, MN, USA;3. JAMA and AMA Manual of Style, Chicago, IL, USA;4. Psychotic Disorders Division, McLean Hospital, Belmont, MA, USA

JAMA Psychiatry, Chicago, IL, USA;5. JAMA and JAMA Network, Chicago, IL, USA;6. JAMA Network, Chicago, IL, USA;7. Office of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Respect, American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, USA;8. Publications, American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC, USA

Abstract:
  • Inclusive language will make scholarly publishing more accurate and more respectful, and it has the potential to help authors reach a wider audience.
  • JAMA and the JAMA Network journals, the American Chemical Society and the Coalition for Diversity and Inclusion in Scholarly Communications have free guides on inclusive language, formatting and images.
  • The guides provide principles and rationale, as well as examples of preferred language, in order to equip people with knowledge to choose the most inclusive words even as terminology preferences change.
Keywords:inclusion  inclusive language  scholarly publishing
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