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This is a workshop on comparative methods, organized by Jeremy Beaulieu and Brian O’Meara. It is supported by NSF Grants _____. It will be held July 20-24, 2020, in Fayetteville, Arkansas (though we are watching the coronavirus outbreak).

Our goal with the course is to create an inclusive, welcoming place to learn comparative methods. One objective is to provide geographic diversity: there are courses at Friday Harbor on Evolutionary Quantitative Genetics, Woods Hole Workshop on Molecular Evolution, and often a workshop at Bodega Bay in California – all on the coasts and far from our locations in the southeastern United States. Our workshop should be accessible to many people, including those within an 8 hour drive:

Map of driving times

Principles

Some of the principles of our course:

Topics

Software

Instructors

Location

The workshop is at the ______. It’s pretty.

FAQ

Code of Conduct

This is adopted from rOpenSci’s unconference code of conduct

We are committed to providing a welcoming and harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of gender, gender identity and expression, age, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, ethnicity, religion (or lack thereof), or technology choices. We do not tolerate harassment of workshop participants in any form. Sexual language and imagery is not appropriate for any workshop venue, including talks, workshops, parties, Twitter and other online media. Workshop participants violating these rules may be sanctioned or expelled from the event at the discretion of the organizers.

This code of conduct applies to all participants, including instructors, and applies to all modes of interaction, both in-person and online.

Workshop participants agree to:

In addition to informal reporting mechanisms above, you can notify Jeremy Beaulieu () or Brian O’Meara () of issues. This is NSF-sponsored; you can report misconduct directly to NSF: see procedures here or reach out directly to their Office of Diversity and Inclusion at programcomplaints@nsf.gov or (703) 292-8020. You can also reach out to your own institution’s or the instructors’ institutions’ Office of Title IX, Office of Equity & Diversity, or similar.

We don’t anticipate any issues, and instructors have been carefully selected for the workshop. However, harassment and other inappropriate conduct is common in biology (Clancy et al. 2014, Nelson et al. 2017, NASEM 2018, O’Meara et al. 2019), and we take it seriously.

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