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Search Results for: Kristin Anderson

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  • 27 Sep 2010

    Don’t Wait, Integrate: Dr. Kristin J. Anderson calls for the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell in a blog for Psychology Today

    As congress weighs the decision of whether to repeal Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, some argue that greater acceptance among heterosexual servicemembers must precede institutionalized protections for lesbians and gay men in the military. Dr. Kristin J. Anderson, author of Benign Bigotry: The Psychology of Subtle Prejudice, tells us why we can’t wait around anymore and […]

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  • 17 Feb 2010

    Page 99: Benign Bigotry

    The Page 99 Test features Kristin Anderson’s Benign Bigotry today, and that page finds Anderson in a discussion of criminality and blame — that is, a subtle form of prejudice assuming that good things happen to good people, and bad things to bad people.

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  • 11 Jan 2010
    Kristin J. Anderson

    Are Katie Couric and Diane Sawyer Perched on a Glass Cliff?

    Diane Sawyer recently took over the anchor chair of ABC World News from Charles Gibson, transforming the evening news landscape with two of the three major network prime-time newscasts now anchored by women. Katie Couric made history only three years ago as the first woman to solo a major network nightly news program, CBS Nightly News. These are important milestones for women, to be sure. But these significant milestones for women come at a perilous time in the history of television, when network news is viewed as an ailing franchise. The growth and proliferation of cable television programming and the ever-intensifying competition from the Internet have resulted in diminishing viewership of the major network evening news, once respected as the go-to source for dependable news. Given the current state of television news, that two of the three networks have women at the helm would have been much bigger news ten years ago than it is today. That Couric and Sawyer are in these still important positions reminds me of a curious phenomenon in organizational management: the glass cliff.

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  • 28 Jul 2009
    Kristin J. Anderson

    Professor Gates and the Criminalization of Black Men in America

    If racism is understood only in terms of slavery and lynching, then we might live in a post-racial era. But this is not an accurate view of how racism and discrimination work. Racist violence still takes place, but today discrimination more often occurs in seemingly little ways, in treatment that, if viewed as isolated events seem to not amount to much. However, psychological research lends support for these individual experiences of African Americans.

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