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Social Cognitive Predictors of Bystander Intervention in Racial Microaggressions Among College Students Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2024-03-08 Laura Reid Marks, Lyndsay Jenkins, Lara Perez-Felkner, Da’Shay Portis Templeton, Khyati Verma
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Beyond Homophily: The Boundary-Specific Effects of Interracial Contact Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2024-02-05 Jiannbin Lee Shiao
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Patterns of Cultural and Coping Factors Among Minoritized Youth: Associations with Discrimination and Depressive Symptoms Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2024-02-04
Abstract Models of resilience in minoritized youth posit that youth need to draw upon multiple different cultural (e.g., identity, values, etc.) and general factors (e.g., coping) to thrive in the face of discrimination. Nonetheless, the integration of these factors in empirical scholarship is lacking, as scholars have typically focused on single factors within these models in isolation. To provide
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Unpacking Appropriation: Examining the Effect of Actor-Related Factors on Perceptions of Cultural Appropriation in Culinary Scenarios Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2024-01-25 Madeline G. Alexanian, Lisa Kiang, Rebekah Lassiter, Marisa Busquets, Dulce M. Lopez Alvarez, Zoe Stuckey
Despite its presence in everyday life, cultural appropriation is not well understood, perhaps because its definition, bounds, and conditions have not been clearly unpacked. The present study uses a between-subjects, mixed-methods approach and culinary-related scenarios to address possible factors that constitute appropriation (e.g., actor background and intent). Utilizing a sample of emerging adults
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The Penalty of Party on Black Homeownership: The Impacts of Judicial Institutional Settings on the Black Political Economy Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2024-01-07 Kendrick B. Roberson
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White American Historical Memory and Support for Native Appropriation Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-12-02 Laurel R. Davis-Delano, Renee V. Galliher, Adrienne J. Keene, Desi Small-Rodriguez, Joseph P. Gone
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Credit Scoring as a Carceral Practice: An Abolitionist Framework Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Terri Friedline, Kimberlee Stewart, Carson Bolinger, Anna K. Wood
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Racial Differences in the Occupational and Geographic Mobility of NCAA Division I College Basketball Assistant and Associate Head Coaches Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-11-24 Scott V. Savage, Kathryn Freeman Anderson
Racial/ethnic minorities, especially people racialized as Black and Latino, face disadvantages at work. Our research reaffirms and adds insight into this disadvantage, showing that compared to people racialized as White, racial minorities experience limited internal mobility and as a result greater geographic instability. Using data from a longitudinal study of the careers of NCAA Division I assistant
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Over-educated or Overly Invested in Education? The Role of Educational Commitment in Asian American Socioeconomic Attainment Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-11-10 Jiannbin Lee Shiao
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The Early Emergence of SES Achievement Gaps: Disparities Across Race, Ethnicity, and Immigrant Status Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-11-08 Claudia Kruzik, Rebekah Levine Coley, Elizabeth Votruba-Drzal, Bryn Spielvogel, Daphne Henry, Laura Betancur
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Examining the Validity of Financial Knowledge Measures in a Context of Racialized Financial Market Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-10-25 Zibei Chen, Julie Birkenmaier, James Garand
Research shows that U.S. racial minority groups have lower levels of financial knowledge than whites, yet an explanation for the knowledge gap remains elusive. Financial knowledge measures are generally constructed by summing respondents’ correct answers on a series of factual items and collapsing incorrect answers and “don’t know” (DK) responses into a single category. However, studies demonstrate
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Does Resilience and Social Support Moderate the Association Between Race-Related Stress Black Women’s Reports of Trauma Symptoms? Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-10-18 Tiffany R. Williams, Christy L. Erving, Fanchen Gao, Taeja Mitchell, Claire Muwele, Reniece Martin, Miaya Blasingame, Dana Jennings
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Real Estate Platforms, the Housing Search Process, and Racial Residential Stratification Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-10-02 Elizabeth Korver-Glenn, Hannah Lee, Kyle Crowder
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Cops and Counselors: How School Staffing Decisions Relate to Exclusionary Discipline Rates and Racial/Ethnic Disparities Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-09-04 Benjamin W. Fisher, Deanna N. Devlin
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The Impact of Community Belongingness on Mental Health and Well-Being Among Black LGBTQ Adults Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-08-24 Keith J. Watts, Shawndaya S. Thrasher
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Smoking at the Intersections of Race/Ethnicity and Sexual Orientation Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-08-24 Min Ju Kim, Zelma Oyarvide Tuthill, Bridget K. Gorman
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Racial Identity and Health Outcomes in an Emerging Latinx Immigrant Community Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-06-08 Aasha Henderson, Brian E. McCabe, Anna Holleman, Rosa M. Gonzalez-Guarda, Allison McCord Stafford
Self-reported and street race have been associated with health in the U.S. Race is a social construction based on phenotypical classifications rooted in colonialism. Yet, perceptions of race are different in the U.S. than in Latin America. We investigated relationships between self-reported race, street race (i.e., socially assigned race), and the health of U.S. Latinx immigrants in a community-engaged
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What Are We Fighting For? Lay Theories About the Goals and Motivations of Anti-Racism Activism Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-06-01 Minh Duc Pham, Kimberly E. Chaney, Nairán Ramírez-Esparza
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How Do Non-Black U.S. College Students Think They Would Feel After Committing a Race-Related Interpersonal Transgression? Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-04-27 Jennifer L. Mezzapelle, Anna-Kaisa Reiman
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Malleable Identity and Parental Identity Accommodation in Multiethnic-Racial Families in the United States: Implications for Psychosocial Well-Being Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-02-16 Megan E. Cardwell, Mackensie J. Minniear, Jordan Soliz
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Raising “Antiracist Disruptors”: Illuminating Socialization Practices that Support Antiracism in Multiracial Households Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-02-01 Victoria A. Vezaldenos, Laura-Ann Jacobs, Deborah Rivas-Drake
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Racially Humble Parenting: Exploring the Link Between Parental Racial Humility and Parent–Child Closeness in Multiracial Black-White Families Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-01-30 McKenzie N. Green, Summer Bryant
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Family Racial/Ethnic Socialization Through the Lens of Multiracial Black Identity: A M(ai)cro Analysis of Meaning-Making Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-01-31 Courtney Meiling Jones, Leoandra Onnie Rogers
The role of family members in racial identity development is often constrained to conceptualizations of parental socialization, with a focus on socialization during childhood and adolescence. However, parents may continue to play a role in racial identity development as youth enter young adulthood and continue to explore who they are. Our study investigates how parents feature in the racial identity
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Investigating How Parental Support Varies Across Racially Diverse Mothers and Fathers in Relation to Emerging Adults’ Multiracial Experiences and Psychological Distress Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-01-27 Annabelle L. Atkin, N. Keita Christophe, Chelsea Derlan Williams
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How Parents in Multiethnic-Racial Families Share Cultural Assets with Their Children Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-01-05 Scott Seider, James Huguley, Emma McCobb, Derek Titchner, Kelly Ward, Hehua Xu, Yezi Zheng
Relatively little psychology research has investigated racial-ethnic socialization processes in multiethnic-racial families despite the fact that more than 1 in 7 children born in the United States today have parents from different ethnic-racial backgrounds. The present study seeks to contribute to the extant research by exploring how parents in multiethnic-racial families seek to help their children
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Examining Racial and Ethnic Disparity in Prosecutor’s Bail Requests and Downstream Decision-making Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2023-01-04 Connor Concannon, Chongmin Na
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Do Ethnic-Racial Identity Dimensions Moderate the Relations of Outgroup Discrimination and Ingroup Marginalization to Self-esteem in Black and Latinx Undergraduates? Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-12-31 Antoinette R. Wilson, Campbell Leaper
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Drivers of Race Crime and the Impact of Bridging Gaps: A Dynamic Empirical Analysis Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-12-09 Kitty Kay Chan
Hate crimes in the US have reached their highest recorded levels in more than a decade. Greater understanding of the factors contributing to violence toward minority groups is needed to support evidence-based policies to curb race crime. This study analyzes the causes of race crime in the US using a state-level dynamic empirical model derived from the combination of well-recognized criminological theories
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Towards Achieving Racial Equity in Juvenile Justice: Reexamining Conventional Trauma Instruments Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-11-18 Jamie Yoder, Camille R Quinn, Rebecca Bosetti, Courtney Martinez
Early life adversity has long been associated with the onset and course of criminal behavior and juvenile justice involvement. Nevertheless, there is a paucity of research on the differential experiences of early life trauma and trauma symptomology among justice involved youth of color who are ubiquitously overrepresented in the juvenile justice system (JJS). Conventional trauma instruments used in
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Ethno-racial and Down Payment Disparities in Mortgage Credit Access Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-11-08 José Loya
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Intersecting Race and Gender Across Hardships and Mental Health During COVID-19: A Moderated-Mediation Model of Graduate Students at Two Universities Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-10-25 Jason Jabbari, Dan Ferris, Tyler Frank, Sana Malik, Melissa Bessaha
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Examining the Crossover Interaction of the Race-Crime Congruency Effect: A Systematic Review Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-08-25 Alexandra N. Bitter, Olivia K. H. Smith, Nicholas D. Michalski, Scott Freng
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Trait Mindfulness Decouples the Association Between System Justification and Racial Outgroup Attitudes Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-08-17 Mollie A. Price-Blackshear, B. Ann Bettencourt
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How Kids View Cops: The Nature of Juvenile Attitudes Toward the Police Revisited Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-08-11 Y. Gail Hurst, James Frank, Mengyan Dai
Research suggests that juveniles are generally less positive in their attitudes toward the police than are adults. The current study re-examines juvenile perceptions of and experiences with the police following one city’s attempt to improve the police-community relationship. Using data collected from 842 ninth through twelfth grade public high school students, bivariate and multivariate analyses are
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Racial Discrimination, Black Identity, and Critical Consciousness in Spain Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-08-01 M.ª Ángeles Cea D’Ancona
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Automatic Prejudice and Weapon Identification: A Study with Students and Police Officers Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-07-21 Gilcimar Santos Dantas, Marcus Vinicius Alves, Marcos Emanoel Pereira
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Local TV News Coverage of Racial Disparities in COVID-19 During the First Wave of the Pandemic, March–June 2020 Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-07-15 Yiwei Xu, Elizabeth K. Farkouh, Caroline A. Dunetz, Sravya L. Varanasi, Sophia Mathews, Sarah E. Gollust, Erika Franklin Fowler, Steven Moore, Neil A. Lewis, Jeff Niederdeppe
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Patterns of Earnings and Employment by Worker Sex, Race, and Ethnicity Using State Administrative Data: Results from a Sample of Workers Connected to Public Assistance Programs Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-07-02 Colleen Heflin, Taryn Morrissey
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Native Appropriation in Sport: Cultivating Bias Toward American Indians Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-06-10 Laurel R. Davis-Delano, Renee V. Galliher, Joseph P. Gone
Supporters of American Indian mascots claim that these mascots honor American Indians. If this is the case, then those who have more contact with, and are more supportive of, these mascots would logically demonstrate support for American Indian Peoples in other ways. In this study, we break new ground by employing a cultivation and social learning approach to examine possible associations between greater
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Social Class also Matters: The Effects of Social Class, Ethnicity, and their Interaction on Prejudice and Discrimination Toward Roma Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-06-08 Ana Urbiola, Marisol Navas, Cristina Carmona, Guillermo B. Willis
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Replication and Extension of the Acceptability of Racial Microaggressions Scale (ARMS) Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-05-28 Christin A. Mujica, Emily L. Allen, Ana J. Bridges
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Discrimination in Context: Examining Neighborhood-Level Variation in the Incidence and Adverse Effects of Perceived Racial and Ethnic Discrimination Among Chicago Youth Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-05-14 Gregory M. Zimmerman, Daniel Trovato, Ayanna Miller-Smith
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Understanding Collective Efficacy as a Racialized Process: Examining the Relationship Between Discrimination and Perceptions of Collective Efficacy Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-05-04 Cecilia Chouhy, James D. Unnever
The current project examines whether perceptions of collective efficacy are racialized. Using a sample of Black and Latinx young adults in Chicago, we first investigate whether perceptions of discrimination vary across Chicago’s neighborhoods and whether neighborhood-level structural characteristics (concentrated disadvantage, immigrant concentration, residential stability) or neighborhood social processes
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Values and Attitudes Toward Immigrants Among School Children in Switzerland and Poland Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-04-21 Charlotte Clara Becker, Eldad Davidov, Jan Cieciuch, René Algesheimer, Martin Kindschi
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White Students’ Perceptions of the Costs and Consequences of Being Black Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-04-17 M. Lyn Exum
Many whites explicitly believe that their race has had no impact on their accomplishments in life. The current study used the contingent valuation method to implicitly measure the value of being white—or alternatively, the cost of being black—among a sample of white college students. Participants were presented with a hypothetical scenario in which their racial appearance was altered due to a medical
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The Influence of Indigenous Identity and Gender in Perceptions of Behavior in Response to Racialized Police Communication Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-04-02 Chelsea L. Sheahan, Emily Pica, Lauren E. Thompson, Alexia Vettese, Joanna D. Pozzulo
The current studies examined whether the race and gender of a person under suspicion (Studies 1 and 2), as well as the race of the person who called the police (Study 2) influences perceptions of police conduct. Participants read a summary in which the police were called on individuals waiting in a coffee shop (Study 1; N = 133) or sleeping in their dorm common room (Study 2; N = 247). Suspect race
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Emotional Response and Behavioral Coping Associated with Experienced and Media Discrimination Among Asians and Asian Americans in the United States Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Pamela P. Chiang, Chia-chen Yang, Jiun-Yi Tsai
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“Crime” in Context: Racialized Physical Space Shifts Person-Perception Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-03-16 Drexler James, Courtney M. Bonam, Valerie Jones Taylor
People often assume areas where black people live are dangerous, impoverished, and rundown, whereas they assume White areas to be safe, wealthy, and well-maintained (Bonam et al. in J Exp Psychol Gen 145(11):1561–1582, 2016). These space-focused racial stereotypes shape how people perceive, evaluate, and treat physical space, such as houses and neighborhoods. Further, people often associate specific
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Old Southern Codes in New Legal Bottles? Sexual Harassment, Race, and Masculinity Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-03-05 John Sibley Butler, James M. Schmidtke, Letisha Engracia Cardoso Brown, Bryan Stephens
Historically, old southern codes were used to regulate the interactions between black males and white females. We draw parallels between these codes and current sexual harassment laws to examine the perceptions of sexual behavior that crosses racial lines. Specifically, we examine how white and black female targets perceived and reacted to the behavior of males of the same and different race than their
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Racialized Gender Differences in Mental Health Service Use, Adverse Childhood Experiences, and Recidivism Among Justice-Involved African American Youth Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Abigail Williams-Butler, Feng-Yi Liu, Tyriesa Howell, Sujeeta E. Menon, Camille R. Quinn
This study examines the racialized gender differences of mental health service use, Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), and recidivism for justice-involved African American youth. Analyses were based on the Northwestern Juvenile Project Study, the first prospective longitudinal study that explores the mental health and substance use disorders and needs among a juvenile justice-involved population
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Health Behavior Theory and Hypertension Management: Comparisons Among Black, White, and American Indian and Alaska Native Patients Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-02-25 Charleen J. Gust, Angela D. Bryan, Edward P. Havranek, Suma Vupputuri, John F. Steiner, Irene V. Blair, Rebecca Hanratty, Stacie L. Daugherty
In the United States, hypertension is more common among individuals from racial and ethnic minority groups. Hypertension control rates are also lower for minority group members compared with White Americans. However, little research has employed well-established theoretical perspectives on health behavior, such as the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) and the Model of Goal-Directed Behavior (MGB), to
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Symbolic Exclusion and Historical Negation Regarding the Indigenous Mapuche People: A Study of Their Moral and Ideological Causes in Chile Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-02-21 Manuel Cárdenas Castro, Héctor Arancibia, Joaquín Bahamondes, Ana Figueiredo
In this study we analyze distinct socio-political predictors, namely, system justification, moral foundations, political ideology, social dominance orientation and authoritarianism, of two distinct but interrelated postcolonial ideologies, namely symbolic exclusion and historical negation in regards to the Mapuche people, in a sample of the general Chilean population (n = 1.242). According to the results
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Consistent Divisions or Methodological Decisions? Assessing the U.S. Racial Hierarchy Across Outcomes Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-01-27 Beka Guluma, Aliya Saperstein
Scholars have offered a range of perspectives on the twenty-first century racial landscape with little consensus about either the current state of the U.S. racial hierarchy or its future trajectory. We offer a more comprehensive assessment, using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) to study racial stratification across a number of socioeconomic outcomes
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Perpetuating Health Disparities of Minority Groups: The Role of U.S. Newspapers in the COVID-19 Pandemic Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-01-21 Xu, Zhan, Lin, Carolyn A., Laffidy, Mary, Fowks, Lyndsey
During the COVID-19 pandemic, news media are expected to play a critical role in reducing health disparities. However, we know little about whether and how disparities in COVID-19 have been covered in national and local U.S. newspapers. This study examined whether minority health gained news attention and whether partisan bias affected related coverage in the early stages of the pandemic. Results indicate
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Racial Essentialism and Stress: A Deadly Combination for Prospective Police Officers’ Encounters with Black Suspects Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-01-11 Tawa, John
Previous research based on documented incidents of police uses of lethal force and experimental studies using computer sorting programs have demonstrated that incorrect lethal force decisions tend to occur more frequently with Black relative to White suspects. Using virtual reality, the current study examined the psychophysiology underlying incorrect lethal force decision with Black suspects, and the
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New Technology, Old Patterns: Fintech Lending, Metropolitan Segregation, and Subprime Credit Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2022-01-10 Haupert, Tyler
This research assesses the relationship between subprime lending rates among applicants to traditional and fintech mortgage lenders and metropolitan-level racial and ethnic segregation in the United States. Fintech—short for financial technology—mortgage lenders underwrite loans using all-online applications and proprietary machine learning underwriting algorithms that process unprecedented amounts
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Educational Attainment Past the Traditional Age of Completion for Two Cohorts of US Adults: Inequalities by Gender and Race/Ethnicity Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2021-12-16 Cohen, Alison K., Ryan, Sarah, Smith, Louisa H., Ream, Robert K., Glymour, M. Maria, Lopez, Andrea, Yen, Irene H.
The vast majority of studies investigating participation in, persistence through, and consequences of postsecondary education focus on educational attainment status among the so-called traditional population of collegegoers between the ages of 18 and 24. This narrow focus leaves largely invisible the role that an expanding set of educational trajectories throughout adulthood plays in shaping social
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Won’t You be My Neighbor? Neighborhood Characteristics Associated with Mass Shootings in the USA Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2021-10-28 Maher, Erin J., Gerlinger, Julie, Wood, Alexandra D., Ho, Katherine
We measure the association between neighborhood characteristics and mass shootings building on existing research on neighborhoods and social and economic composition and crime. Using publicly available national data from the Gun Violence Archive (2014–2019), we geocoded and merged mass shooting incidents with US Census American Community Survey data. Our bivariate results suggest that census tracts
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Stable School Integration? Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2021-09-27 Francis, Dania V., Horn, Keren M.
As public school districts across the country are released from their mandatory school desegregation orders, there has been increasing examination of the re-segregation of public schools. By contrast, little attention has been paid to schools that are becoming more integrated and whether stable racial integration exists in public schools. Using National Center for Education Statistics Data on school
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White Americans’ Attitudes Toward Reparations for Slavery: Definitions and Determinants Race and Social Problems (IF 2.877) Pub Date : 2021-09-03 Reichelmann, Ashley V., Hunt, Matthew O.
The issue of reparations to the descendants of persons enslaved in the United States is receiving increasing attention in both the public sphere (e.g., 2020 Presidential campaigns) and in academic circles. However, the term “reparations” often goes undefined in such discussions, despite the fact that different types of government action (e.g., an apology versus financial payments) are associated with