Leaper, Campbell
The United Nations' Goals for Sustainable Development highlight gender inequality as a pervasive problem around the world. Developmental psychologists can help us understand the development and consequences of sexism in people's lives. I highlight ambivalent sexism theory as a promising framework for this work; and I offer recommendations for expan...
Xu, Yusi Cho, Dalnim Dawkins-Moultin, Lenna Borjas, Maria Hopfer, Suellen Nguyen, Nicholas Mann, Sarah Lun, Di Ramondetta, Lois M Lu, Qian
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Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the most common sexually transmitted infection on U.S. college campuses. Although HPV vaccination is recommended through age 26, current efforts to improve vaccination rates have predominantly focused on adolescents. Consequently, vaccine uptake remains suboptimal among young adults. This represents a significant misse...
Krems, Jaimie Arona Merrie, Laureon A Rodriguez, Nina N Williams, Keelah EG
Manalo-Pedro, Erin Enriquez, Laura E Nájera, Jennifer R Ro, Annie
Restrictive immigration policies harm the mental health of undocumented immigrants and their U.S. citizen family members. As a sociopolitical stressor, threat to family due to immigration policy can heighten anxiety, yet it is unclear whether political engagement helps immigrant-origin students to cope. We used a cross-sectional survey of college s...
Schwartz, Flora Chernyak, Nadia
Theories of justice suggest that it serves two main purposes: punishment and restoration. Although punishment emerges early and has been well-documented, little is known about the contexts in which young children engage in restorative practices like compensation for victims. The current study investigated whether children's engagement in compensati...
Sweeny, Kate
Academic abstractPatience has been of great interest to religious scholars, philosophers, and psychological scientists. Their efforts have produced numerous insights but no cohesive theoretical approach to understanding the broad set of experiences people label as patience. I propose a novel view of patience, one that departs from but ties together...
Van Natta, Meredith
This article examines how U.S. immigration law extends into the health care safety net, enacting medical legal violence that diminishes noncitizens' health chances and transforms clinical practices. Drawing on interviews with health care workers in three U.S. states from 2015 to 2020, I ask how federal citizenship-based exclusions within an already...
Wilson, Melissa Sweeny, Kate
Waiting for important news is uniquely anxiety provoking, and expectations for one's outcome fluctuate throughout the wait. Emotional volatility is typically associated with negative outcomes, but little is known about volatility in expectations. In Study 1, law graduates (N = 248) estimated their chances of passing the bar exam every 2 weeks durin...
Vance, Stanley R Venegas, Luz Johnson, Jack Chaphekar, Anita V Sinha, Anoushka Parmar, Deepika D Sevelius, Jae
Benefits of parental gender-affirming behaviors on the mental health and well-being of the broader gender-expansive youth population have been extensively documented. However, the nature and impact of these behaviors have not been explored by centering Black and Latine transgender/non-binary youth (BLTY). This article offers a new framework called ...
Hudson, Sa-kiera Tiarra Jolynn Kurdi, Benedek Lai, Calvin K Johnson, Julian Banaji, Mahzarin R
Five studies examined implicit (IAT) attitudes toward the slurs n***er and n***a among Black and White Americans (total N = 3,226). Both groups showed strong implicit negativity toward n***er/a combined relative to socially acceptable contrast terms such as Black or African American. Controlling for baseline Black–White race attitudes, Black Americ...