L
Laurie James-Hawkins
Researcher at University of Essex
Publications - 41
Citations - 1397
Laurie James-Hawkins is an academic researcher from University of Essex. The author has contributed to research in topics: Domestic violence & Mental health. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 36 publications receiving 1133 citations. Previous affiliations of Laurie James-Hawkins include University of Colorado Boulder & Emory University.
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Fundamental dimensions of social judgment: understanding the relations between judgments of competence and warmth.
TL;DR: The authors report 4 studies that examine the dynamic relationship between these two dimensions, experimentally manipulating the location of a target of judgment on one and examining the consequences for the other, suggesting a negative dynamic relationship.
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Women’s agency and its relationship to current contraceptive use in lower- and middle-income countries: A systematic review of the literature
TL;DR: It is suggested that longitudinal and intervention studies in lower- and middle-income countries will be useful for understanding the causal impact of women’s agency on contraceptive use, and will help to inform policies and programmes to increase contraceptive use in these settings.
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Men's Perpetration of Partner Violence in Bangladesh: Community Gender Norms and Violence in Childhood.
TL;DR: Interventions that address the trauma of childhood violence and that promote more equitable community gender norms may be needed to mitigate IPV perpetration by younger men.
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Growing Old Behind Bars Health Profiles of the Older Male Inmate Population in the United States
TL;DR: The complexity of health for elderly inmates should continue to be monitored to aid correctional and community health programs in understanding clinical risks, exposures, and health care needs for this population.
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Health Lifestyles in Early Childhood
TL;DR: Across kindergarten measures of cognition, behavior, and health, preschool health lifestyles predict children's development even after controlling for social disadvantage and concurrent household resources.