The following resources provide a variety of different perspectives and highlight the importance of citation justice, the impact of citation erasure, and the various ways academic norms cause harm.
Civic Laboratory for Environmental Action Research (CLEAR)
"Kyle Powys Whyte is a professor at Michigan State University, and Sarah Hunt is an assistant professor of First Nations and Indigenous Studies at University of British Columbia. Both have experienced first hand how difficult the peer review process can be for Indigenous academics."
"Drawing from my lived experience with Lake Trout as a member of NunatuKavut who grew up in southern Labrador and a student at a colonial university, I discuss how citation practices are used to influence the political ecology of knowledge infrastructures." - Alex Flynn, with Rui Lui, Max Liboiron, Kaitlyn Hawkins, and Molly Lahn Rivers
"It's simple: Cite Black Women. We have been producing knowledge since we blessed this earth. We theorize, we innovate, we revolutionize the world. We do not need mediators. We do not need interpreters. It's time to disrupt the canon. It's time to upturn the erasures of history. It's time to give credit where credit is due." - Christen A. Smith
Moya Bailey and Trudy aka @thetrudz discuss coining the term misogynoir and their experience with citation erasure.
"Despite coining the term in 2008 and writing about the term online since 2010, we experience, to varying degrees, our contributions being erased, our writing not cited, or our words plagiarized by people who find the word compelling." - Moya Bailey and Trudy Bailey (aka @thetrudz)