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0.5: Social Justice

  • Page ID
    57604
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    Social justice needs research and, hence, statistics to understand the complexity of using psychology to further the social justice mission. There are many underserved, overlooked, complex populations and messy issues. We lack a framework to organize our perspectives on these issues. Statistics, as applied to social justice issues, can be used to make sense of these issues. However, statistics cannot be bludgeoned into a social justice issue. When using statistics to understand social justice, the nuances and idiosyncrasies of social justice issues must be considered. For example, in statistics, sample size is a key consideration for evaluating the stability of the findings. In brief, larger sample sizes are better. In social justice issues, large sample sizes are not possible. People affected by social justice issues are often hard to find, recruit, and participate. Stigma, discrimination, and reluctance interfere with a researcher’s goal of recruiting enough of a sample size to power a statistical test. Considerations when using statistics need modification because the usual rules of conducting statistics do not apply when using statistics to investigate social justice issues.

    Statistics should not be a barrier to investigating social justice issues. Just because you cannot obtain a sample size of 30 participants does not mean that your study and statistical analysis should be abandoned. The important perspective is that you are trying to investigate the social justice issue. Yes, be mindful of the statistical framework, but just because you cannot satisfy the statistical framework does not mean you abandon your investigation. There are other ways to conduct statistics, but this book only discusses one of the ways, which is the general linear model. There are other possibilities to consider when investigating social justice issues that will not lend themselves to satisfying the requirements of conducting a statistical analysis.


    This page titled 0.5: Social Justice is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Peter Ji.