School of Humanities and Sciences
Showing 1,301-1,320 of 1,718 Results
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Emily "Sal" Salamanca
Postdoctoral Scholar, Political Science
Current Research and Scholarly InterestsAncient political thought, Renaissance and early modern political thought, intellectual history, classical reception, history of democratic theory, aristocratic institutions, political aesthetics
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Cherry Salazar
Data Analyst 1, Communication
BioCherry Salazar (she/her) is an award-winning investigative data and multimedia journalist from the Philippines. Cherry previously analyzed and visualized data for Civic News Company, collaborating with national and local reporters covering education, voting rights, and public health. At the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ), one of the world's oldest nonprofit investigative newsrooms, she reported on campaign finance, social media and disinformation, energy transition, trafficking, and attacks against the press. Before that, she produced documentaries for ABS-CBN Corporation, the Philippines' largest media network until it was forced off the air by the Duterte administration in 2020.
Cherry is currently a data journalist at Big Local News, where she helps newsrooms and reporters produce impactful data-driven stories. -
Aliya Saperstein
Benjamin Scott Crocker Professor of Human Biology
BioProfessor Saperstein received her B.A. in Sociology from the University of Washington and her Ph.D. in Sociology and Demography from the University of California-Berkeley. In 2016, she received the Early Achievement Award from the Population Association of America. She has also been a Visiting Scholar at the Russell Sage Foundation and Sciences Po (Paris).
Her research focuses on the social processes through which people come to perceive, name, and deploy seemingly immutable categorical differences —such as race and sex—and their consequences for explaining, and reinforcing, social inequality. Her current research projects explore several strands of this subject, including:
1) The implications of methodological decisions, especially the measurement of race/ethnicity and sex/gender in surveys, for studies of stratification and health disparities.
2) The relationship between individual-level category fluidity or ambiguity and the maintenance of group boundaries, racial stereotypes, and hierarchies.
This research has been published for social science audiences in the American Journal of Sociology, the Annual Review of Sociology, Demography, Ethnic & Racial Studies, and Gender & Society, among other venues, and for general science audiences in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and PLoS One. It also has been recognized with multiple article awards, and gained attention from national media outlets, including NPR and The Colbert Report.