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Monitor on Psychology Volume 38, No. 5 May 2007 |
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APA'S ANNUAL CONVENTION Public interest programming in San Francisco will delve into how stereotyping, profiling, social inequity and other such phenomena affect psychological and physical health. Print version: page 54 APAs Public Interest Directorate and Board for the Advancement of Psychology in
the Public Interest (BAPPI) are sponsoring a series of programs on the value of social justice in
todays society. The five symposia in the series will explore how social injustice affects,
and plays out differently among, racial and ethnic minorities; women; lesbian, gay, bisexual
and transgender communities; children, youth and families; older adults; people with disabilities
and people with HIV/AIDS. The program will also look at the positive impact of social justice and
include a policy discussion featuring some of Californias top legislators.
The five symposia are:
Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick? A Preview of a PBS Documentary
and Discussion, held Friday, Aug. 17, 10 –11:50 a.m. Speakers include Larry Adelman,
of the documentary film center California Newsreel, in San Francisco; Troy Duster, PhD, of New
York University; and Nancy E. Adler, PhD, of the University of California San Francisco. BAPPI
Chair Margaret B. Heldring, PhD, president of Americas Health Togethera national
health-care advocacy organizationwill chair the symposium, co-listed by Divs. 9 (Society
for the Psychological Study of Social Issues), 27 (Society for Community Research and Action),
45 (Society for the Psychological Study of Ethnic Minority Issues), and 51 (Society for the Psychological
Study of Men and Masculinity).
Vulnerable AND Impressionable: Social Inequality and Childrens Exposure
to Health Risks, held Sunday, Aug. 19, 2–2:50 p.m. The session will address the relationship
between poverty and obesity, the sexualization of young girls and the effects of marketing and
commercialization on children. Presenters include Eileen Zurbriggen, PhD, of the University
of California Santa Cruz; Brian Wilcox, PhD, of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln; and
symposium chair Barbara H. Fiese, PhD, of Syracuse University. The session is co-listed by APAs
Committee on Children, Youth and Families, Committee on Women in Psychology, and Divs. 9, 27, 45,
and 51.
Aging and Health Disparities: Cumulative Effects of Race, Gender and SES,
held Sunday, Aug. 19, 3–3:50 p.m., will address such topics as barriers to care for immigrant
women and the role of socioeconomic status, age and race in health disparities. The session is co-listed
by APAs Committee on Aging as well as Divs. 9, 27, 45 and 51. Presenters include: David Chiriboga,
PhD, of the University of South Florida; Barbara Yee, PhD, of University of Hawaii at Manoa; James
S. Jackson, PhD, of the University of Michigan; and Toni C. Antonucci, PhD, of the University of
Michigan. Rosemary Blieszner, PhD, of Virginia Tech, will chair the symposium.
Mental Health Effects of Racial Profiling and Stereotyping, held Monday,
Aug. 20, 11–11:50 a.m. The symposium will explore how stereotyping and labeling affect
minorities and people with disabilities. APAs Committee on Disability Issues in Psychology,
APAs Committee on Ethnic Minority Affairs (CEMA) and Divs. 9, 27, 45 and 51 will co-list the
session, to be chaired by Allan Noonan, MD, MPH, of Morgan State University. Additional presenters
include Nadia Hasan, of the University of Akron; Muninder Ahluwalia, PhD, of Montclair State University;
Rhoda Olkin, PhD, of Alliant International University; and Irene Leigh, PhD, of Gallaudet University.
The session discussant is James Jones, PhD, of the University of Delaware.
Public Policy and Mental Health Implications of Immigration: Local, State and
Federal Perspectives, held on Friday, Aug. 17, 1–2:50 p.m., is co-listed by CEMA
and Divs. 9, 27, 45 and 51. Presenters include Margarita Alegria, PhD, of Harvard University; Los
Angeles Mayor Antonio R. Villaraigosa; California State Senator Gloria Romero (D); and Rep. Michael
Honda (D-Calif.). Ricardo Aislie, PhD, of the University of Texas at Austin, and Lelan Y. Yee, speaker
pro tempore of the California State Legislature, will serve as discussants. Jose M. Cervantes,
PhD, of California State University Fullerton, will chair the session.
Note that all session dates and times are subject to change. All dates, times and locations for
programs will be listed online at www.apa.org/convention in June and in the convention program,
available in July. |
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