Still color-Blind? The treatment of race, ethnicity, intersectionality, and sexuality in sociological social psychology

Matthew O. Hunt, Pamela Braboy Jackson, Samuel H. Kye, Brian Powell, Lala Carr Steelman

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    23 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    Purpose - The chapter revisits and updates an earlier analysis to assess the extent to which sociological social psychology's treatment of race has changed since 2000, and evaluates the degree to which issues of intersectionality and sexuality are engaged in social psychological scholarship. Design/methodology/approach - The chapter provides a content analysis of articles published between 2000 and 2012 in Social Psychology Quarterly, a leading journal in sociological social psychology, and of chapters published in two influential handbooks in social psychology. Findings - It documents a notable increase in the percentage of articles in Social Psychology Quarterly in which race/ethnicity is referred to, included in the analysis, or seriously engaged. Patterns vary by methodological approach used in these articles. Social psychological attention to intersectionality and sexuality, as measured by the percentage of articles that broach these topics, is minimal. Research limitations/implications - This chapter restricts its analysis to the leading journal in sociological social psychology, but still demonstrates that there is potential for greater movement toward the incorporation of race/ethnicity, intersectionality, and sexuality in social psychological scholarship. Originality/value - It calls attention to core topics in sociology that would benefit from greater scholarly engagement by social psychologists.

    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationAdvances in Group Processes
    Subtitle of host publicationThirtieth Anniversary Edition
    EditorsShane Thye, Edward Lawler
    Pages21-45
    Number of pages25
    DOIs
    StatePublished - 2013

    Publication series

    NameAdvances in Group Processes
    Volume30
    ISSN (Print)0882-6145

    Keywords

    • Gender
    • Intersectionality
    • Race/Ethnicity
    • Sexuality
    • Social psychology

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