I've been looking at the results of the latest developer survey showing Stack Overflow as a community of white
Here again we see evidence for problems with diversity and inclusion.
straight
men
although such a low percentage points to problems with inclusion in the tech industry in general and Stack Overflow in particular.
This data has been used outside the site as an evidence of toxic elitism and in my personal opinion, had significant impact on the discussion around Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming.
However there is another way of looking at the same data. Out of 101,592 qualified responses, 57,473 (56.57%), 59,765 (58.83%), 64,364 (63.36%) have been used for Race and Ethnicity, Sexual Orientation and Gender summary respectively. So it is possible that we are not really comfortable with questions about race:
and sexual orientation
and at least somewhat uneasy about questions regarding gender
and have healthy attitude to online privacy.
Without independent confirmation (like follow-up survey) extrapolating missing data to whole population is hardly justified. Furthermore geographical distribution of respondents, with over 23% from Asia and 2.8% from Africa (that's truly disheartening number, but likely reflecting wider systemic problems, much larger than SO community) suggests that at least ethnicity data is a bit more complex. It is also worth pointing out that to verify problems with [race and ethnicity] diversity and inclusion we should provide expected distribution, reflecting geographic distribution of respondents (naive projection, let's say on US census data, would suggest strong positive bias towards Asian population), in case there is no bias.
This of course just another narration, which frankly speaking reflects my own opinion that questions this highly intrusive (no matter if you refrained from answer or not, you leak sensitive personal information, especially in presence of additional data), but I believe it is worth discussing.
Please don't get me the wrong way - there is enough independent evidence for different inclusion problems in overall industry, but extrapolating US data to explain worldwide survey, might not be the best approach. At the same time, if we acknowledge inclusion issues, we might suspect there will be some effect on respondent willingness to answer, and additional caution when analyzing collected data, would be advised.
Code and data:
- Data from Developer Survey Results 2018
- Code to reproduce plots: https://pastebin.com/UeRa8Mwr
It is also worth noting, that independent of the actual underlying distribution, the current choice of representation can have unintended chilling effect on prospect users, especially those, who already feel vulnerable. Not welcoming is one thing, not welcoming bunch of self-identified white straight man, is well...
Of course without independent data it is just a hypothesis, but maybe one we should consider in the light of recent discussions.
Clarifications
There is no evidence that any data has been intentionally hidden. All numbers come from the survey summary, are publicly available, and clearly displayed. Furthermore anonymized data should be soon available for download, same as the results of the previous surveys.
You are free to analyze data yourself, and make your own conclusions.
Chilling effect - Please don't read to much into this remark. I have never claimed that being self-identified, white, straight, male implies being unwelcoming.
In fact presenting community as a group of self-identified R O G for any combination of R ∈ Race, O ∈ Orientation, G ∈ Gender can have negative effect on anyone, who does not identify with particular description, no matter how welcoming community is.
I stress out self-identified, because unlike independent statements of facts, it might suggest that these properties are important part of the group identity.
Before you assume that specific political agenda led to this particular choice of data presentation, please acknowledge that the survey hasn't been designed as a proper social study, therefore possible insights are fairly limited.
Subjectively speaking the survey has been designed with English speaking, North American respondents in mind, while majority of respondents (74.58%) came outside North America or countries where we reasonably assume English to be the first language (over 60% - Counting United States of America, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland - the main, primarily English speaking source of traffic. I intentionally omitted India, as although widely used, it seems to be the first language only for a small fraction of population. ). We should also acknowledge privacy and legal concerns.
Finally, for my personal experience, there is significant difference in the data culture between social and cultural researchers and more business oriented data scientist, with former one considering missing data an additional source of information, while latter one going more with brute force drop / impute approach. I hope it won't offend any data scientists here.
According to both meta and blog, survey-2018 is the right to place to submit survey feedback. While there is no direct question here, I believe it still should be an acceptable post.
not welcoming bunch of self-identified white straight man
you mention I sincerely ask, what can I do to encourage others to use this site?