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Building: O'Brien Centre for Sciences, Floor: 1, Room: ALE E1.17/1.18
Thursday 11:15 - 13:00 BST (15/08/2024)
Papers of this panel present different research questions in different social settings, but they all have one thing in common: they address the impact of human perception on different disadvantaged groups. Tatia Kekelia’s paper is about gender stereotypes and how they shape women’s lives in Georgia; Francesca Bramucci analyzes the influence of persuasion and social norms on the treatment of LGBTQIA* groups, whereas Ioana Cerasella studies how the meaning of productivity (i.e. its perception) affects gig economy workers in UK subjected to disablement and exploitation. She explores the role of human imagination not only as a discriminating tool, but as a possible solution to work problems as well. All three authors use qualitative methods such as in-depth face-to-face interviews, expert interviews, critical literature analysis, field experiment, etc.
Title | Details |
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Gender Stereotypes at the Court of Georgia: Perceptions of Attorneys on Gender Bias | View Paper Details |
Perceptions and responses to VAWIP (Violence Against Women in Politics) in Latin America: An Artificial Intelligence-based analysis | View Paper Details |
Intergroup contact and social norms | View Paper Details |
Imagining Alternative Futures with Gig Economy Workers Subjected to Structural Disablement Oppression and Exploitation | View Paper Details |