Julie Spray
@juliespray.bsky.social
1.5K followers 1.6K following 170 posts
Childhood & medical anthropologist, child health researcher, Lecturer at University of Galway Ireland, Pākehā New Zealander, she/her, never enough cats. I study people because they fascinate & confuse me. Children make most sense though. We like to draw.
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juliespray.bsky.social
“In the Kalahari, one little boy who would almost certainly be diagnosed with autism in an American doctor’s office is highly valued for his abilities… the boy, his father told me, “is great herding goats. He always knows where they are in the day or night.””

www.nytimes.com/2025/09/24/o...
Opinion | Autism Has Always Existed. We Haven’t Always Called It Autism.
www.nytimes.com
juliespray.bsky.social
This is a super helpful and interesting window into the editorial process - I learned a lot! I found the explanation of the relationship between editor and reviewer reports in final decision-making especially helpful to understand.
amethno.bsky.social
📢📢📢 New Editorial Alert 📢📢📢

American Ethnologist editors lift the lid on the ‘black box’ of journal submission...

An Editorial Insight: Be wary of making ungrounded “what I call” assertions of novelty. A much better strategy is to trace where your ideas have come from.
juliespray.bsky.social
I was a grad student when Trump got elected in 2016, and the next day a very senior professor commented: "just goes to show the dangers of an uneducated populace."

I have always remembered that remark over the last few years of social and political regression. Lest we forget what education is for.
juliespray.bsky.social
And you know so much more than them! You know so much more than you did the last time you taught, you’ve forgotten how much you know
juliespray.bsky.social
Trump helped me learn to recognise narcissistic people in my own life. Once you see the pattern and understand the drivers, confusing people become a lot more predictable. Thanks Donald, I guess?
juliespray.bsky.social
It was, I think, the most exciting episode I’ve ever seen of any franchise. So well edited too. What a dream cast, what a joy to watch them
juliespray.bsky.social
And the students are so much younger right?!
juliespray.bsky.social
Please tell Lisa congratulations ngā mihi nui on an amazing first episode and I’m so proud of her! Also why is she not on Bluesky
Reposted by Julie Spray
minorrevision.com
#AcademicSky #SciPub #PeerReview #PhDSky #OpenScience #AcademicResearch #AcademicWriting #ScholarlyPublishing #AcademicPublishing #AcademicChatter 🧪
juliespray.bsky.social
We've had huge societal shifts that made childhood a private matter instead of a collective social responsibility, then wonder why so many youth are alienated & vulnerable. We need to think about this with a social & generational lens on gender & power, not an individualised developmentalist lens.
juliespray.bsky.social
We are asking boys, who are age-segregated and stripped of agency in schools, where they must play a social Game of Thrones, to resist the vortex of power and make themselves relationally vulnerable without any models as to how. This is actually super hard and wise adult men need to step in to help.
juliespray.bsky.social
If boys are being algorithmically gender-segregated into cultural bubbles where leaders and role models convert their vulnerability into a sense of power, then that's a potent vortex and we can't hold kids responsible for knowing how to navigate that alone. This is a hermeneutic injustice issue.
Reposted by Julie Spray
harryshier.bsky.social
A valuable checklist. Thanks Julie. And for those seeking to explore further and challenge adultism in research, can I offer some additional resources from my own back catalogue: www.harryshier.net/docs/Shier-A...
www.harryshier.net/docs/Shier-W...
juliespray.bsky.social
When I interview medical professionals about children’s role in their chronic illness management, so many of them only point to receiving education. It’s such an injustice to children, who are typically already doing a lot of their own management that adults don’t see.
juliespray.bsky.social
Let me know how this resonates and if you have any more items to add to the checklist! Next resource is: "How might adultism be shaping your participants' experiences?"
juliespray.bsky.social
It's hard to see what we're not seeing when working from the dominant or majority (normative) social position. As researchers, we share a normative but rarely critically considered position as ADULTS.

This means our research has likely been shaped by adult-centrism. I made a resource.
How adult-centric is your research? I consider my research ageless
Most or all of my participants are working-age adults 
I consider research about children, youth or older-age people to be the subject of special niche scholarship, not mainstream to my discipline. I expect research involving children, youth or older-age people to be separate subfields.
I consider my research ageless
Most or all of my participants are working-age adults 
I consider research about children, youth or older-age people to be the subject of special niche scholarship, not mainstream to my discipline. I expect research involving children, youth or older-age people to be separate subfields.
Age variation within the adult age category is not part of my analysis
I do not specify the age or life stage of my participants when contextualising their stories or quotes 
I don’t really consider how the perspectives of children, adolescents or older-age people might change my interpretations of adult participants’ experiences in my research
Reposted by Julie Spray
georgetakei.bsky.social
When I was little, the U.S. military came to our home at gunpoint and took me and my family away. We were imprisoned for years in barbed wire camps simply because we were Japanese American. I have spent my life telling that story, hoping it would never be repeated.
juliespray.bsky.social
Watching the US from afar, you realise the frog did notice the water heating up, it just believed the next midterm would turn off the stove.
Reposted by Julie Spray
katymontgomerie.com
Ireland has had "sELf iD" for 10 years now and not one single issue that the media, government and anti-trans movement predicted has come to pass. Not one.

If it works in Ireland why would it not work here? No one who opposes it can give a good answer, because the real answer is transphobia
denisebreen.bsky.social
Ten years ago, on this day 15 July, the Irish Oireachtas passed the Gender Recognition Act 2015 (An tAcht um Inscne a Aithint, 2015).
It was a piece of legislation that allowed me to live my life authentically & I'm forever grateful.
Despite what others may have you believe, the sky did not fall in.
Reposted by Julie Spray
luckytran.com
BREAKING: Scientists are staging a “science fair” in the lobby of a Congressional building to tell elected officials about the critical knowledge the US will lose because their research grants have been canceled.
juliespray.bsky.social
Pretty sure they tasted awful because my mum boiled the tasty out of them.

(Children also have differences in taste receptors that make them more averse to bitter foods)
juliespray.bsky.social
Turns out all those guns don’t help when the militia is well regulated by consumer capitalism
juliespray.bsky.social
Might be good use for that well regulated militia