9 results on '"Christine Alksnis"'
Search Results
2. Workforce Segregation and the Gender Wage Gap: Is 'Women's' Work Valued as Highly as 'Men's'?
- Author
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Christine Alksnis, James Curtis, and Serge Desmarais
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Labour economics ,Social Psychology ,Women's work ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Devaluation ,Wage ,Sex discrimination ,Work (electrical) ,Workforce ,Situated ,Salary ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
This study focuses on gender segregation and its implications for the salaries assigned to male- and female-typed jobs. We used a between-subjects design to examine whether participants would assign different pay to 3 types of jobs wherein the actual responsibilities and duties carried out by men and women were the same, but the job was situated in either a traditionally masculine or traditionally feminine domain. We found pay differentials between jobs defined as “male” and “female,” which suggest that gender-based discrimination, arising from occupational stereotyping and the devaluation of the work typically done by women, influences salary allocation. The ways in which the results fit with contemporary theorizing about sexism and with the shifting standards model (Biernat, 1995, 2003) are discussed.
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- 2008
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3. Fundamental Justice Is the Issue: Extending Full Equality of the Law to Women and Children
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Christine Alksnis
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Sexual violence ,Social condition ,Legal recourse ,Redress ,social sciences ,Criminology ,Economic Justice ,humanities ,Sexual aggression ,Law ,Political science ,health care economics and organizations ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Criminal justice - Abstract
The legal doctrines that are in place to protect women and children against male sexual aggression actually operate to minimize the use of the system for redress, and to reduce the impact of the process when it is used. Because the courts are the only means of legal recourse available to women and children who have been sexually assaulted, any failure by the courts to ensure just outcomes actually serves to reinforce male sexual violence. The solution requires that we stop confusing the social conditions under which this form of violence occurs with the criteria used by courts for treating a crime as “not serious.” The key players in the courts can act as powerful forces for instrumental change.
- Published
- 2001
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4. [Untitled]
- Author
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Serge Desmarais, Christine Alksnis, Nichola Hunter, and Charlene Y. Senn
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Sexual violence ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Injury prevention ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Poison control ,Context (language use) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Suicide prevention ,General Psychology ,Use of force ,Sexual coercion - Abstract
Self-report measures of sexual violence that ask women whether they have experienced threats of physical violence have attracted criticism in recent years; detractors claim that these measures lead researchers to overestimate the prevalence of sexual violence. Our study explored this issue by collecting data on the prevalence of threats versus force in the context of sexual aggression. Female undergraduates at two universities (n1 = 69; n2 = 111) were asked about their experiences with sexual coercion using a revised version of the Sexual Experiences Scale (Koss and Gidycz, 1985). Four of the original items were modified to distinguish between sexual contact that occurred as a result of a perpetrator using physical force and sexual contact that occurred because a perpetrator threatened physical violence. Analyses of the revised items revealed that the use of physical force was at least as likely as threats and that for some types of sexual acts, physical force was actually more likely than verbal threats. Furthermore, prevalence figures for three of the four types of sexual acts considered were not significantly altered by collapsing threat of force with use of force. Implications for future research on women's experiences of sexual coercion are discussed.
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- 2000
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5. The standard of social justice as a research process
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Christine Alksnis, Laura Park, and K. Edward Renner
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Law reform ,Sexual violence ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Criminology ,Social issues ,Theory of criminal justice ,Community psychology ,Justice (ethics) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,General Psychology ,Seriousness ,media_common ,Criminal justice - Abstract
An empirical perspective is presented illustrating the application of the principles and methods of community psychology for conceptualizing the ideal of "social justice." The substantiative content of the paper is based on an analysis of the selective nature of sexual assaults which reach the criminal justice system, and in the disparity of sentences given to those found guilty, in comparison to other types of cases. These outcomes are proposed as operational definitions for conceptualizing the ideal of social justice. The application of this standard for cases of sexual assault suggests the justice system "discounts" the seriousness of these offenses, resulting in a legal doctrine which excuses male violence against women. Implications for law reform are proposed based on the need for an accommodation of the social/psychological concept of "difference" in the legal definition of sexual assault, and in the greater use of evaluation research as a process of legal scholarship for monitoring how well the ideal of social justice is achieved by the criminal justice system.One purpose of the present paper is to highlight the value of using a community psychology framework for conceptualizing important social issues that adversely affect the human condition, and of the responsibility of psychologists to address these issues through empirical scholarship. The methodological perspective which follows is based on a research program that began over a decade ago and now includes three principal data sources: The first is based on the records of an agency which provides services for victims of sexual assault. This data, supplemented by two national victimization surveys (Solicitor General of Canada, 1983, 1984; and Statistics Canada, 1993), provide the best available description of the true nature and frequency of incidents of sexual assault. The second source, the court records, provides a formal account of the outcome of the criminal justice process. The third data source, comprised of transcripts of court cases, provides a qualitative reference point that ensures that the quantitative analyses of the court records are capturing the essential aspects of actual courtroom dynamics, i.e., that the statistical analysis has ecological validity.Two of the three methodologies have been previously described in the literature and will not be re-described in detail here. Briefly, the case data now includes 2,533 consecutive cases responded to by a sexual assault service. (For methodological details see Renner & Wackett, 1987; Renner, Wackett & Ganderton, 1988 for previous reports based on the initial 1,236 cases.) The court record data now includes a run of 1,074 consecutive court cases tried in the same city, composed of sexual assaults (n=354), and, for comparative purposes, physical assaults ([Symbol Not Transcribed] = 513) and robberies ([Symbol Not Transcribed] = 207). (For methodological details see Yurchesyn, Keith & Renner, 1992; Renner & Yurchesyn, 1994 for previous reports based on the initial 356 cases of the now larger sample.) These two expanded data sources have been supplemented by a sample of 104 transcripts of 51 adult and 53 child sexual assault cases from the court records data files. This third data source was the primary basis of the qualitative propositions to be advanced and evaluated in this paper(f.1).These three data sources converge to provide a descriptive account of how the crime of sexual assault on women and children by men is addressed by the formal legal doctrines which have been put into place by the criminal justice system. Our research does not address the frequency or nature of sexual offenses by women against men or children. Thus, the second purpose of this paper is to examine how cases of male sexual violence are handled by the criminal justice system from the perspective of whether the standard of "social justice" is being met. Social justice is the ideal of seeking the truth in an effort to provide fair and just outcomes through the criminal justice process (Renner & Warner, 1981). …
- Published
- 1997
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6. Gender differences in scripts for different types of dates
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Serge Desmarais, Christine Alksnis, and Eileen Wood
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Gender Studies ,Social Psychology ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Sexual intimacy ,Psychology ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
The primary objective of this study was to determine whether males and females have different views about the partner behaviors that constitute positive, negative, and typical dating experiences. Undergraduate students (50 males, 70 females; primarily Caucasian) were asked to rate the likelihood of sexually suggestive and nonsexual events in “good,” “bad,” and “typical” date contexts. For good and typical dates, men and women identified many of the same events as likely to occur. However, sexually charged events were more salient for men in these contexts, as shown by the higher mean likelihood ratings men gave to items describing sexually suggestive partner behaviors. For bad dates, there was a striking gender difference in the behaviors judged likely to occur. Women gave higher mean likelihood ratings to sexually charged events in bad dates. Furthermore, women incorporated sexually charged events in their scripts whereas men did not. These findings have implications for our understanding of how males and females view the development of sexual intimacy in dating.
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- 1996
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7. Effects of Language Choice on Acculturation
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Christine Alksnis, Margaret Lanca, Robert C. Gardner, and Neil J. Roese
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Linguistics and Language ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Immigration ,Ethnic group ,Collectivism ,050109 social psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,language.human_language ,Acculturation ,Education ,Individualism ,Anthropology ,Multiculturalism ,language ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Portuguese ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Competence (human resources) ,media_common - Abstract
The present study investigates whether language preference is associated with different acculturation attitudes. As residents of Montreal, 103 Portuguese immigrants or firstgeneration Canadians of Portuguese descent completed a questionnaire in their preferred language (English, French, or Portuguese) assessing their modes of acculturation, selfreported ethnic identity, self-esteem, individualistic and collectivistic tendencies, and self-reported competence in speaking and reading English, French, and Portuguese. The results indicated that language preference was associated with ethnic identity. Moreover, there was a strong identification with the North American culture by the English respondents and a weaker association with the French-Canadian culture by French respondents. These results indicate that language choice strongly reflects different acculturation attitudes and that research should be directed toward both macro-and microcultural levels in a "dominant" society.
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- 1994
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8. Work-related disability in Canadian nurses
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Christine Alksnis, Linda O'Brien-Pallas, Shirliana Bruce, Michael S. Kerr, Mieke Koehoorn, Judith Shamian, and Donna Thomson
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Status ,Personnel Staffing and Scheduling ,Personnel Turnover ,Workload ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Logistic regression ,Work related ,Odds ,Risk Factors ,Absenteeism ,Medicine ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,Musculoskeletal Diseases ,Workplace ,Burnout, Professional ,General Nursing ,Occupational Health ,Aged ,Insurance Claim Reporting ,Ontario ,Descriptive statistics ,business.industry ,Overtime ,Hospital level ,Middle Aged ,Occupational Diseases ,Nursing Administration Research ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,Quartile ,Family medicine ,Workers' Compensation ,business - Abstract
Purpose: To determine factors contributing to high registered nurse (RN) injury claim rates in Canadian hospitals. Design: Cross-sectional study of secondary 1998-99 data for RNs (N = 8,044) in Ontario, Canada, linked at the hospital level (n = 127). Methods: Descriptive statistics, correlations, and logistic regression analyses were conducted. Results: The odds of a high RN lost-time claim rate increased by 70% for each quartile increase in the percentage of RNs reporting more than 1 hour of overtime per week. The odds of a high RN musculoskeletal lost-time claim rate decreased by 64% for every one unit increase in the hospital-level score on the nurse-physician relationship subscale. Conclusions: To retain and optimize scarce hospital nursing resources, strategies to address overtime, sick time, and nurse-physician relationships might provide fiscal and human benefits.
- Published
- 2005
9. Gender Issues
- Author
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Serge Desmarais and Christine Alksnis
- Published
- 2005
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