Institution
Southern Illinois University Carbondale
Education•Carbondale, Illinois, United States•
About: Southern Illinois University Carbondale is a education organization based out in Carbondale, Illinois, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 13570 authors who have published 24819 publications receiving 667385 citations. The organization is also known as: SIU Carbondale & SIUC.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this paper, Collins advocates for Black feminist autoethnography as a theoretical and methodological means for Black female academics to critically narrate the pride and pain of Black womanhood.
Abstract: This article couples Black feminist thought (Collins, 2009) and autoethnography to advocate for Black feminist autoethnography (BFA) as a theoretical and methodological means for Black female academics to critically narrate the pride and pain of Black womanhood. Rooted in my desire to “talk back” (hooks, 1989) to systemic oppression as a biracial (Black and White) Black woman, I position anger as a productive force that fuels coming to voice through BFA as an act of resistance. In this article, BFA is used to self-reflexively explore my everyday experiences as an “outsider within” (Collins, 1986) and problematize the omnipresence of racism and sexism (at the least) in the everyday lives of Black women. Situating my anger as just and justifiable, I locate my voice directly in response to controlling imagery, such as the angry sapphire that denotes angry women of color as unruly, while simultaneously highlighting the need for “progressive Black sexual politics” (Collins, 2005, p. 16) that bear witness to th...
192 citations
01 Jan 1996
191 citations
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TL;DR: The most parsimonious set of variables best predicting overt responsible environmental behavior of the TU sample consisted of perceived skill in using environmental action strategies (SKILL) and level of environmental sensitivity (LES, total R 1 −.1513) as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Wisconsin members of Trout Unlimited (TU), Ducks Unlimited (DU), and the Wisconsin Trappers' Association (WTA) were surveyed to assess the most parsimonious sets of eight selected variables that best predicted responsible environmental behavior and to what extent these sets of variables differed from the most parsimonious set of predictors of responsible environmental behavior in a selected Sierra Club sample. The most parsimonious set of variables best predicting overt responsible environmental behavior of the TU sample consisted of perceived skill in using environmental action strategies (SKILL) and level of environmental sensitivity (LES, total R 1 − .1513). For the DU sample, the most parsimonious set of predictors consisted of SKILL and individual locus of control (total R2 = .2077). For the WTA sample, the most parsimonious set of predictors consisted of SKILL, LES, and group locus of control (total R 2 = .5023). The most parsimonious set of predictor variables for the selected Sierra Club ...
191 citations
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TL;DR: This paper employed an online survey of 442 politically interested Web users during the 2000 presidential election to examine the extent to which relying on the Web for political information influe, and found that the majority of the users relied on the web for information flow during the election.
Abstract: This study employed an online survey of 442 politically interested Web users during the 2000 presidential election to examine the extent to which relying on the Web for political information influe...
191 citations
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TL;DR: This paper found that the overall attitudes of black and white teenagers toward police performance are significantly different from one another, while their evaluations of officer performance during personal encounters are more similar, suggesting that the relationship between race and attitudes toward the police has been the subject of numerous studies since the, 1960s.
Abstract: The relationship between race and attitudes toward the police has been the subject of numerous studies since the, 1960s. Unfortunately, only a limited number of studies have addressed this relationship as it applies to juveniles. The present study, using survey responses from 852 public high school students in a large metropolitan area, compares the attitudes of black and white teenagers. We find that the overall attitudes of black and white juveniles toward police performance are significantly different from one another, while their evaluations of officer performance during personal encounters are more similar.
190 citations
Authors
Showing all 13607 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Pulickel M. Ajayan | 176 | 1223 | 136241 |
Russel J. Reiter | 169 | 1646 | 121010 |
Derek R. Lovley | 168 | 582 | 95315 |
Martin B. Keller | 131 | 541 | 65069 |
Kurunthachalam Kannan | 126 | 820 | 59886 |
John P. Giesy | 114 | 1162 | 62790 |
Michael L. Blute | 112 | 527 | 45296 |
Jianjun Liu | 112 | 1040 | 71032 |
Janusz Pawliszyn | 109 | 788 | 52082 |
Wei Zhang | 104 | 2911 | 64923 |
Horst Zincke | 101 | 375 | 30818 |
Janet R. Daling | 100 | 354 | 31957 |
Eric Lam | 99 | 492 | 34893 |
Sergei V. Kalinin | 95 | 999 | 37022 |
John C. Cheville | 90 | 433 | 32806 |