diff --git a/_posts/2025-01-31-randolph.md b/_posts/2025-01-31-randolph.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..be8eafde7 --- /dev/null +++ b/_posts/2025-01-31-randolph.md @@ -0,0 +1,133 @@ +--- +layout: post +title: "US-RSE Celebrates Black History Month" +tags: [dei, black-history] +author: Cordero Core +date: 2025-01-31 +--- + +[*Originally post on +Medium*](https://medium.com/@cdcore/a-philip-randolph-the-brotherhood-of-sleeping-car-porters-and-the-invisible-labor-of-research-6546aa5716fb) + +![A. Phillip Randolph]({{ site.baseurl }}/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph.png "A. +Phillip Randolph in front of the Lincoln Memorial"){: width="400" } + +### A. Philip Randolph, The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, and the Invisible Labor of Research Software Engineers + +In 1925, A. Philip Randolph took on a challenge that many deemed +impossible - organizing Black railroad porters into a union that would demand +fair wages, humane working conditions, and respect. The Brotherhood of Sleeping +Car Porters and Maids became the first Black-led union to receive a charter +from the American Federation of Labor, marking a pivotal moment in American +labor history. Randolph understood something profound: labor, especially Black +labor, was often unseen, undervalued, and dismissed. But through organization +and collective action, the invisible could be made visible. + +Nearly a century later, a different kind of labor remains invisible - the work +of research software engineers (RSEs). They build the code that powers modern +scientific discovery, yet many find themselves in an ambiguous space within +academia and research institutions. Their contributions are fundamental, but +their labor often goes unrecognized in publications, funding structures, and +career pathways. This is not a coincidence. It is part of a larger historical +pattern. + +--- + +### The Unseen Hands that Move the World + +The sleeping car porters were integral to the expansion of American rail +travel. They worked long hours under harsh conditions, often relying on tips +rather than wages. They were expected to be invisible - to perform their work +without complaint, to make passengers comfortable, and to disappear into the +background. But their impact on American society was immense. + +Research software engineers may not work on railroads, but their labor carries +a similar paradox. They enable science to move forward - writing software that +models climate change, processes astronomical data, and deciphers genetic +codes. Yet, the very institutions that benefit from their labor often fail to +formally recognize them. Many RSEs are classified as temporary workers, +postdocs, or "other support staff," despite their indispensable role in +research. + +Randolph understood that change would not come from individual effort +alone - it required collective organization. The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car +Porters became a vehicle for economic mobility, civil rights, and structural +change. Today, the US Research Software Engineer (US-RSE) community is doing +similar work, advocating for the formal recognition of RSEs in academia and +pushing for career paths that respect the reality of their contributions. + +--- + +### The Power of Naming and Recognition + +One of Randolph's greatest victories was securing the term "Brotherhood" in the +name of the union. To be recognized as part of an organized workforce rather +than just "servants" was revolutionary. Naming something - calling it what it +is - is an act of power. + +![Railroad workers]({{ site.baseurl }}/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph-2.png +"Photo of two rows of railroad workers") + +In research, the term Research Software Engineer did not exist in widespread +use until the past decade. Before that, individuals who wrote software for +research were often called "computational scientists," "programmers," or simply +"support staff." The adoption of RSE as a professional title mirrors the +struggle of the porters: to be named is to be seen. To be seen is to demand +recognition. + +For many RSEs, their work is not just a technical function - it is a form of +advocacy. They fight for open-source software, for better funding models, for +institutional recognition. Just as the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters laid +the groundwork for Black labor organizing, today's RSEs are building the +foundation for future generations of software engineers in research. + +--- + +### Labor is Political + +Randolph understood that labor and civil rights were inseparable. He was not +just organizing workers - he was challenging the racial and economic systems +that shaped their exploitation. His work directly contributed to the broader +Black freedom struggle, including the 1963 March on Washington, which he +co-organized. + +The fight for recognition in research may seem different, but it is no less +political. It is about who gets to claim credit for discovery, who receives +funding, and who has the stability to build long-term careers in science. Many +RSEs, particularly those from underrepresented backgrounds, face additional +barriers in these spaces. Their work is essential, yet they often find +themselves excluded from the power structures that shape research priorities. + +Randolph did not accept invisibility as fate. Neither should research software +engineers. + +--- + +### The Path Forward + +As we mark the 100th anniversary of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters and +Maids, it is worth reflecting on what labor advocacy means today. RSEs, like +the porters before them, are shaping the future through unseen, undervalued +labor. Their work is critical, their contributions are real, and their fight +for recognition is just beginning. + +![Black History Month Logo]({{ site.baseurl +}}/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph-3.png "Celebrating the Past, Looking Toward the +Future, Black History Month") + +Randolph believed in the power of organizing, in the necessity of solidarity. +The US-RSE community stands as a modern parallel - advocating for fair labor +practices, recognition, and inclusion. The lesson from history is clear: no +labor is truly invisible unless we allow it to be. + +If research software engineers continue to build, organize, and demand +recognition, they - like Randolph and the Brotherhood - will shape a future +where their labor is seen, valued, and honored. + +--- + +Stay tuned, share your thoughts, and be part of the conversation. How has +invisible labor shaped your field? Let's make history visible - together. + +Join us on Slack in the +[`#dei-discussion`](https://usrse.slack.com/archives/C01C8CJQ7AP) channel. diff --git a/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph-2.png b/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph-2.png new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9a3677897 Binary files /dev/null and b/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph-2.png differ diff --git a/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph-3.png b/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph-3.png new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a08da09c3 Binary files /dev/null and b/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph-3.png differ diff --git a/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph.png b/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph.png new file mode 100644 index 000000000..130afaa69 Binary files /dev/null and b/assets/img/bhm-2025-randolph.png differ