An Official Journal of the Center for Race and Social Problems at the University of Pittsburgh. Selected for coverage in: Social Sciences Citation Index® Journal of Citation Reports/ Social Sciences Edition Current Contents®/ Social and Behavioral Sciences Race and Social Problems (RASP) provides a multidisciplinary forum for issues germane to race and its enduring relationship to psychological, socioeconomic, political, and cultural problems. The Journal publishes original empirical studies, reviews of past research, theoretical studies, and invited essays that advance the understanding of the complexities of race and its relationship to social problems. Submissions from the fields of social work, anthropology, communications, criminology, economics, history, law, political science, psychology, public health, and sociology are welcome. Your article in Race and Social Problems? Submit your article online via http://www.editorialmanager.com/rasp
Race and Social Problems
Opis
Identyfikatory
ISSN | 1867-1748 |
e-ISSN | 1867-1756 |
DOI | 10.1007/12552.1867-1756 |
Wydawca
Springer US
Informacje dodatkowe
Zbiór danych: Springer
Artykuły
Race and Social Problems > 2019 > 11 > 4 > 269-281
Though considerable research demonstrates that non-Hispanic blacks and non-Hispanic whites in the USA vary in how much their health improves from educational attainment, empirical work that explains why these populations arrive at unequal returns to education is sparse. In this study, to flesh out our understanding of how heterogeneous educational gradients arise among racial populations in the USA,...
Race and Social Problems > 2019 > 11 > 4 > 290-298
Research on racial fluidity has become increasingly common as researchers seek to understand the ways and reasons people change their racial identifications and/or are perceived differently over time and across contexts. Concurrently, researchers have deepened their investigations of the attitudinal and identity aspects of “color,” that is the ways that people’s racial and political attitudes vary...
Race and Social Problems > 2019 > 11 > 4 > 299-307
Dehumanization, defined as the psychological process through which others are perceived as being non-human, has been of interest to researchers for many years, in part because of its potential to inform our understanding of how human beings justify harm toward out-groups. The current research extends the literature by using a novel experimental manipulation to investigate dehumanization’s effect on...