Genes, Race and Psychology in the Genome Era
In January 2005, the American Psychological Association published a series of 10 articles in the American Psychologist, created by scholars who work in the fields of genetics, race or related areas to begin a discussion of the issue of race and genetics within the field of psychology.
Two articles in the series were written by scholars from the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI): NHGRI Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., NHGRI Associate Investigator Vence Bonham, J.D. and NHGRI Ethical, Legal and Social Implications (ELSI) Researcher Vivian Ota Wang, Ph.D. (The ELSI Research Program).
All of the documents on this page are in format. To view these pdfs you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader.
From NHGRI:
- Race and Ethnicity in the Genome Era: The Complexity of the Constructs
Vence L. Bonham, Esther Warshauer-Baker, and Francis S. Collins
- In the Eye
of the Storm: Race and Genomics Research and Practice
Vivian Ota Wang, Stanley Sue
The Complete Series: Genes, Race and Psychology in the Genome Era:
- Genes, Race and Psychology in the Genome Era: An Introduction
- Race and Ethnicity in the Genome Era: The Complexity of the Constructs
- Race as Biology Is Fiction, Racism as a Social Problem Is Real: Anthropological
and Historical Perspectives on the Social Construction of Race
- The Meaning of Race in Psychology and How to Change It: A Methodological
Perspective
- In the Eye of the Storm: Race and Genomics Research and Practice
- Intelligence, Race, and Genetics
- Under the Skin: On the Impartial Treatment of Genetic and Environmental Hypotheses of Racial Differences
- Race and IQ: Molecular Genetics as Deus ex Machina
- The Use of Race Variables in Genetic Studies of Complex Traits and the Goal
of Reducing Health Disparities: A Transdisciplinary Perspective
- Genes, Environment, and Race: Quantitative Genetic Approaches
- Race and Genetics: Controversies in Biomedical, Behavioral, and Forensic
Sciences
Last Reviewed: May 7, 2012