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Both conventional public beliefs and existing academic research on colorism presuppose that variation in skin color predicts social outcomes among minorities but is inconsequential among whites. The authors draw on social psychological research on stereotyping to suggest that in quick, low information decisions such as an arrest, the opposite may be true. Contrary to findings for longer term socioeconomic outcomes, the authors find that black men’s probability of arrest remains constant across the spectrum of skin color, while white men’s probability of arrest decreases continuously with lighter skin. Beyond posing an exception to the modern conception of colorism, these results have implications for efforts to ameliorate the epidemic of incarceration among black men, as well as for understanding how elements of visible phenotype may serve as a unique category of predictors in models of social inequality.
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ur aren't showing a picture but the answer is in the top..
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<em>I will bring back a book, some snacks, and a blanket to sit on.</em>
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I believe this is Robert Frost, however I am not 100% sure. From "The Road Not Taken"
As I see it, the only line that makes up a rhyming couplet is C."So I stared at the Night! And she / Stared back solemnly at me!". Well, it’s easy to catch the beat, you just need to read all the words aloud with pauses and all the punctuation marks. In that case we have two rhyming words, they are ‘’she’’ and ‘’me’’, you need to focus on the pause after ‘’she’’ and everything will be clear.