BRIAN LOWERY
Stanford University Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior
Researchers have long seen evidence that ethnic minorities and women show lower levels of academic engagement than Whites and men. Lowery's talk provides evidence that the way inequality is described can reverse this pattern of academic (dis)engagement. He will also touch on what these findings tell us about the psychological and moral burdens associated with social inequality.
Brian Lowery is an Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior at Stanford. A social psychologist, Lowery's research focuses on the operation of unconscious racial attitudes and on how individuals perceive inequality. His teaching centers on translating basic knowledge about human interactions into lessons for managers, and on managing diversity. He has written about underlying assumptions that may exacerbate existing inequity, affirmative action, and in-group and out-group dynamics in major scholarly journals including the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, and Law and Human Behavior. He also oversees the Lowery Lab, which focuses on how individuals perceive inequality.
SCOPE's brown bag seminar series brings notable experts to the Stanford community to address issues of educational opportunity, access, equity, and diversity in the United States and internationally.