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Pages 4-11

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From page 4...
... Chapter 2 describes measurement and model­ ing approaches for the study of structural racism, with specific attention toward the strengths and weaknesses of these approaches for population health and aging research. Chapter 3 summarizes expert insights on data and data infrastructure needs both to measure and model structural racism and to identify and measure the mechanisms that link racism to population
From page 5...
... This Proceedings follows the general structure of the workshop and has been prepared by the workshop rapporteur as a factual summary of what occurred at the workshop. The workshop planning committee's role was limited to organizing and convening the workshop (see Appendix B for biographical sketches of the workshop discussants and speakers)
From page 7...
... • The key path forward in structural racism research centers on building inter­ disciplinary frameworks that integrate scholarship from the arts, humanities, social sciences, and population health. (Margaret Hicken)
From page 8...
... . blindfolded by fear." Li described Coates's inability to be comfortable with a White stranger, even though he was never in danger, as an ingrained "anticipatory stress response," having been taught that all White people pose a threat to Black people in a city that was segregated and violent, with
From page 9...
... Hammonds provided key definitions to introduce the concept of race and to frame the workshop's discussions of structural racism (see Box 1-1)
From page 10...
... Tracing historical discussions of race, Hammonds described W.E.B. Du Bois's contribution of 60 data visualizations in 1900 to an exhibit in Paris that focused on the progress of African Americans since Emancipation.
From page 11...
... , this "explains the seeming contradiction of officers of color being as likely as their White counterparts to use lethal force against people of color." Bonilla-Silva indicated that this lack of understanding about the sys­ temic nature of racism persists in part because society incorrectly conflates racism with prejudice. First, prejudice focuses on individuals' psychology or attitudes, whereas structural racism is collective and societal, and extends beyond attitude to create an ideology.


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