A small pile of piles next to a stack of money, by Kaboompics.com is licensed under Pexels License ...
Misrepresentation continues to allow certain kinds of stories to be told about groups of people in ways that maintain and perpetuate dominant social hierarchies. For example, when we misrepresent ...
This article by García-Albacete and Hoskins (2024) examines the effect of higher education on political self-efficacy. The article suggests that some teaching methods may widen the gender gap in ...
In February 2024, the New York Times published a two-part series on the results of a survey of men who are fans of women’s soccer. The survey addressed how and why men became fans of women’s soccer, ...
Give Methods a Chance offers a unique multimedia introduction to research methods. This volume, which builds on podcast interviews available at TheSocietyPages.org, introduces readers to some of the ...
Individuals and social groups have always been cyborgs because we have always existed in tandem with technology. Today, with the vast proliferation and diffusion of new technologies throughout society ...
Lucas is a SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow at University of Toronto Mississauga and was formerly the Justice, Equity, and ...
NHW & MM: In 1980, families headed by single mothers were five times as likely to be poor as two-parent families. Forty-five years later, single mothers were still almost five times as likely to have ...
A conspiracy theory is a belief that powerful and secretive groups are involved in hidden, often harmful activities. These beliefs usually follow three key ideas: 1) Nothing happens by chance—every ...
This article by García-Albacete and Hoskins (2024) examines the effect of higher education on political self-efficacy. The article suggests that some teaching methods may widen the gender gap in ...