
Archive for July 2025
Seven in ten renters worried about asking for repairs
Leveraging technology to probe mechanisms of psychopathology: A proof of concept study of inhibitory control
CfP: Current Directions in Social Dilemmas Research (Deadline: 30 Nov)
A systematic literature review of randomization procedures within single-case research designs
Women’s economic independence and physical intimate partner violence (IPV) during separation
Using a Mediation Moderation Model to Examine Exposure to Videos of Police Use of Force in Media, Police Contact Anxiety, Grit, and Suicidality Among Black Emerging Adult College Students
An Exploration of the Relationship Between Social Work Degree and Interprofessional Collaboration in the U.S. Child Welfare System
Better starts to school in South Australia

A Texas woman’s image defined the Great Depression. For decades, no one knew who she was.

Texas Monthly | D Lange
Dorothea Lange, “Woman of the High Plains, Texas Panhandle,” June 1938.
Contribution of metamemory beliefs to age-related differences in the effect of emotion on judgments of learning.
The University Unfettered: Public Higher Education in an Age of Disruption

Memory selectivity in younger and older adults: The role of conative factors in value-directed remembering.
Commentary on the Racialized Experiences of Asian Americans and Implications for Antiracist Research
Our Patients Want to Die at Home. Are They Prepared for It?
Cannabis Withdrawal and Psychiatric Intensive Care
Tobacco Product Regulation: Opportunities for Advancing Health Equity in Rural America
Why I blew the whistle on extreme confinement on Rikers Island

The Marshall Project | X Chen
Social worker Justyna Rzewinski saw people with mental illness “deadlocked” in their cells for months without sunlight, human contact — or medication.
Support. Don’t Punish: Advancing Towards a Health and Human Rights-Based Approach to Drug Policies
Music Therapists’ Understanding of Trauma and Trauma-Informed Care: A Survey of Board-Certified Music Therapists
How Zohran Mamdani’s win in the New York City mayoral primary could ripple across the country

ScheerPost | @ZohranKMamdani
Mamdani’s win is clearly a rebuke of the more corporate wing of the Democratic Party. I know there are people who say that New York is different from the rest of the country. But from a political perspective, Democrats in New York are less different from Democrats in the rest of country than they used to be. That’s because the rest of America is so much more diverse than it used to be. But if you look at progressive politicians now in the House of Representatives and state legislatures, they are being elected from all over – not just in big cities like New York anymore.
Profiles in Notetaking: A Multiple Case Study
Parent Education Levels Affect Migrant and Seasonal Head Start Families’ Engagement With Education and Job Training
Five decades of research on psychological treatments of depression: A historical and meta-analytic overview
Association between mental illness and disciplinary confinement and its effect on mental health: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Pushing for Equity, Pulling at Heartstrings: Perinatal Care Access for Uninsured Migrants
A practical guide to user-friendly data in publications
The efficacy of interventions in the workplace promoting exercise and a healthy diet among shift workers: A systematic review
Married Same-Sex Couples in the United States on the 10th Anniversary of Obergefell v. Hodges
This is the worst piece of legislation in modern American history
Hurricane exposure, character traits, and hurricane event centrality
Call for Associate Editor [International Journal of Social Welfare (IJSW)]
Upton Sinclair and the fight against workplace death and injury

The Jungle by Upton Sinclair, published in 1906, remains one of the most widely known pieces of realist literature from the early 20th century. An expose of the brutal exploitation of immigrant workers in Chicago’s meatpacking industry, told through the struggles of Lithuanian immigrant Jurgis Rudkus and his family, The Jungle—both as a novel and as a work of investigative journalism—takes on renewed importance today with rising levels of workplace death and injury, and amidst workers’ fightback for independent control of workplace safety through the independent investigation into the death of Stellantis worker Ronald Adams Sr. initiated by the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC).
A YMCA membership for every older foster youth

Americans’ views on abortion differ by state

What Happened Again? A Post-2024 U.S. Presidential Election Analysis
Development of Clinical Practice Guidelines for Responding to Intimate Partner Violence Use Disclosures in U.S. Healthcare Settings
Housing for Recovery Initiative
Key facts and figures about adult social care
Why SNAP Works A Political History—and Defense—of the Food Stamp Program
