Tami Kim, a UVA assistant professor of business administration, researched the strategy that brands use in advertisement – called identity appeals – to target consumers based on a specific identity. What she and colleagues found is that when brands use this strategy to target consumers with a marginalized identity and evoke a stereotype, the ad campaign is more likely to backfire.
Burger King U.K. sparks uproar with ‘Women belong in the kitchen’ tweet on International Women’s Day
“I get excited any time I can build a bridge between the University and the community, especially the African-American community,” said Ahmad Hawkins, a former UVA student-athlete and a behavioral coordinator at Lugo-McGinness Academy, an alternative high school for at-risk students in Charlottesville. He’s part of a group aiming to foster the connection between UVA and the Charlottesville community with a series of events beginning Tuesday night.
The demand for help at free clinics has been on the rise since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, but one UVA medical student is working to easily connect volunteers with them.
With more vaccine in the pipeline, experts predict more of us will be inoculated against COVID in the next few months, and at some Virginia schools, nursing students are stepping up to help. Dozens of them are learning at UVA before taking their place on the injection line.
(Commentary) The Virginia Republicans of the 1950s weren’t the angels Shaun claims they were either. As former UVA Professor William G. Thomas III put it, ”In 1957 in Virginia J. Lindsay Almond won the governorship in a bitter campaign against Ted Dalton that hinged on the politics of who would defend segregation better” [emphasis added].
(Video) GoLocal interviewed UVA Politics Chair Jennifer Lawless, who discussed the Biden’s administration’s final push of the record $1.9 trillion stimulus legislation, Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo’s high profile, as well as New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s fate.
Things are unlikely to get any easier for Biden’s Democrats with their current majorities. “It’s possible that the high point for Democrats was just reached,” said Larry Sabato, professor of politics at the University of Virginia.
Wisconsin U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson has also recently downplayed the severity of the insurrection and amplified former President Donald Trump’s false claims that elections were “stolen” in key swing states, including Wisconsin. “He has been saying and doing things that just can’t be justified,” said Larry Sabato, director of UVA’s Center for Politics. “I think a lot of people have been stunned that he would go as far as he has.”
The continued refusal by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo to resign in the face of mounting scandals is drawing comparisons to Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, who wouldn’t resign in 2019 despite calls from members of his own party to step down over a scandal of his own. “#Cuomo is pulling a Northam,” UVA Center for Politics Director Larry Sabato tweeted Monday, comparing the two Democrat governors.
Having lived in Virginia most of his life, Larry Sabato can remember racially segregated schools and systematic efforts to stop Black people voting. Now 68, he observes a state that has diversified, embraced liberal values and shifted from symbol of the old South to symbol of the new.
“With Donald Trump out of the limelight, by definition, the entire movement stepped back a bit,” says Jennifer Lawless, a UVA political scientist. “We’ve seen so many egregious examples of sexual harassment and sexual assault and just hostile working conditions for women that – and this is a terrible way to put it – the novelty has worn off. In some ways, people have become almost inoculated against these kinds of charges.”
“The more often the president makes himself available, the better the chances that his arguments will reach their intended audience without filtering by the often hostile press,” said Mary Kate Cary, a senior fellow at UVA’s Miller Center and a former speechwriter for President George H.W. Bush.
The measure has received criticism, with some experts calling it a Band-Aid. “Imagine that you have a college-aged kid who runs up $1,500 in credit card debt,” said James P. Naughton, an actuary now teaching at the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business. “If you give him $1,500 dollars and you don’t do anything else, the odds that the problem is going to get fixed are pretty low.”
(Commentary) The cornerstone of classic liberal thinking is the “idea that good information, good arguments will triumph over bad information and bad arguments over time,” Siva Vaidhyanathan told On the Media co-host Bob Garfield. Today, Vaidhyanathan, a UVA professor of media studies, argues that a regard for facts has given way to a kind of epistemological tribalism. “People are subscribing to … claims about the world based on their identities, based on their relationships with others, based on what makes them feel better about themselves … the clustering of the Like-Minded for the sake of c...
Delayed kindergarten enrollment, also known as redshirting, is an annual occurrence, but the coronavirus pandemic has contributed to the process. Redshirting, normally sought out by families who are white, affluent and have sons, is when a child delays starting kindergarten for one year. “It is this idea of giving kids the gift of time, the idea of giving them another year to develop, grow and play and potentially be in a less structured environment will allow them to get more out of it down the road,” said Daphna Bassok, a UVA associate professor of education and public policy.
(Podcast) Martin Davidson is the Johnson & Higgins Professor of Business Administration at UVA’s Darden School of Business and senior associate dean and global chief diversity officer. His book, “The End of Diversity as We Know It: Why Diversity Efforts Fail and How Leveraging Difference Can Succeed,” introduces a research-driven roadmap to help leaders more effectively create and capitalize on diversity in organizations.
Interview with Lesley Lokko, recipient of the Ada Louise Huxtable Prize, whose global teaching career has radically changed the conversation around race, identity and architecture. At present, she is still teaching, remotely, at UVA and New York’s Cooper Union, while embarking on another novel – she finds writing fiction a pleasurable distraction from the pressures of academia.
Kiki Petrosino, a UVA professor of English, has been awarded the 2021 Rilke Prize. Since 2012, the University of North Texas’s department of English has awarded the annual Rilke Prize to recognize exceptional artistry and vision by a mid-career poet.
(Audio) In this week’s Unifying America edition of the Kaleidoscope, we look at the joy or dismay people felt over news that six books by Dr. Seuss will no longer be published over racist and insensitive images. Allison speaks with UVA professor Sylvia Shin Huey Chong, who specializes in American and Asian American studies, about what she thinks about this controversy that’s been going on for years.
In the past few years, Asian and Asian-American films that have received critical acclaim have largely focused on East Asian experiences or have featured a predominantly East Asian cast. “It’s not East Asians excluding Southeast Asians, but East Asians and Southeast Asians being put into a zero-sum game, where they have to compete for a limited amount of attention from from people who finance and produce films,” says Sylvia Shin Huey Chong, an American studies and English professor at the University of Virginia who also directs the Asian Pacific American Studies minor.