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      Gender, Race, and Meritocracy in Organizational Careers

      American Journal of Sociology
      University of Chicago Press

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          Process Analysis: Estimating Mediation in Treatment Evaluations

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            Accounting for the effects of accountability.

            This article reviews the now extensive research literature addressing the impact of accountability on a wide range of social judgments and choices. It focuses on 4 issues: (a) What impact do various accountability ground rules have on thoughts, feelings, and action? (b) Under what conditions will accountability attenuate, have no effect on, or amplify cognitive biases? (c) Does accountability alter how people think or merely what people say they think? and (d) What goals do accountable decision makers seek to achieve? In addition, this review explores the broader implications of accountability research. It highlights the utility of treating thought as a process of internalized dialogue; the importance of documenting social and institutional boundary conditions on putative cognitive biases; and the potential to craft empirical answers to such applied problems as how to structure accountability relationships in organizations.
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              BEYOND SIMPLE DEMOGRAPHIC EFFECTS: THE IMPORTANCE OF RELATIONAL DEMOGRAPHY IN SUPERIOR-SUBORDINATE DYADS.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                American Journal of Sociology
                American Journal of Sociology
                University of Chicago Press
                0002-9602
                1537-5390
                May 2008
                May 2008
                : 113
                : 6
                : 1479-1526
                Article
                10.1086/588738
                069d5dd8-1ef0-4c78-b4f8-83039eb5e915
                © 2008
                History

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