Jack Glaser is a social psychologist whose primary research interest is in stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination. He studies these intergroup biases at multiple levels of analysis. For example, he investigates the unconscious operation of stereotypes and prejudice using computerized reaction time methods, and is investigating the implications of such subtle forms of bias in law enforcement. In particular, he is interested in racial profiling, especially as it relates to the psychology of stereotyping, and the self-fulfilling effects of such stereotype-based discrimination. Additionally, Professor Glaser has conducted research on a very extreme manifestation of intergroup bias - hate crime - and has carried out analyses of historical data as well as racist rhetoric on the Internet to challenge assumptions about economic predictors of intergroup violence. Professor Glaser is working with the Center for Policing Equity as one of the principal investigators on a National Science Foundation- and Google-funded project to build a National Justice Database of police stops and use of force incidents. He is the author of Suspect Race: Causes & Consequences of Racial Profiling.
Contact and Office Hours
(510) 642-3047 (Office)
Video of April 15 Panel on Unconscious Bias and Policing (moderated by Professor Glaser)
Discussing Suspect Race with P. Figueroa and H. Brady
Being Well Podcast with Forest and Rick Hanson: "Unlearning Unconscious Bias with Dr. Jack Glaser"
Office 2607 Hearst, Room 312
Office Hours
By appointment (jackglaser@berkeley.edu)
About
Areas of Expertise
- Political Psychology
- Stereotyping, Prejudice & Discrimination
- Criminal Justice
- Politics
- Race & Policy
- Social Psychology
- Racial Profiling
- Policing
- Unconscious Social Cognition
- Hate Crime
Curriculum Vitae
Other Affiliations
- UC Berkeley Department of Psychology
- Center for Policing Equity
- Center for the Study of Law & Society, UC Berkeley
- Institute of Personality and Social Research, UC Berkeley
Research
Current Projects
Selected Publications
Implicit Bias and Policing
Spencer, K. B., Charbonneau, A. K., & Glaser, J. (2016). Implicit Bias and Policing. Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 10(1), 50-63.
Possibility of Death Sentence Has Divergent Effect on Verdict for Black and White Defendants
Glaser, J., Martin, K.D, & Kahn, K.B. (2015). Possibility of death sentence has divergent effect on verdicts for Black and White defendants. Law & Human Behavior.
Suspect Race: Causes and Consequences of Racial Profiling
Glaser, J. (2014). Suspect Race: Causes and Consequences of Racial Profiling. New York: Oxford University Press.
Race Bias and Public Policy
Glaser, J., Spencer, K.B., & Charbonneau, A. (2014). Racial bias and public policy. Policy Insights from Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1, 88-94.
How and Why Implicit Attitudes Should Affect Voting
Glaser, J., & Finn, C. (2013). How and why implicit attitudes should affect voting. PS: Political Science and Politics, 46, 537-544.
In the News
Articles and Op-Eds
How to Reduce Racial Profiling
Greater Good Magazine, May 28, 2015
Banning, Yet Institutionalizing, Racial Profiling
Berkeley Blog, December 22, 2014
Biased Policing is Real -- and Fixable
San Francisco Chronicle, December 19, 2014
Why Gov. Nixon Has To Remove Prosecutor
St. Louis Post Dispatch, August 21, 2014
Colorblind or Just Blind?
Alternet, September 28, 2003
A Bogus Ban on Racial Profiling
Alternet, July 16, 2003
The Fallacy of Racial Profiling
San Francisco Chronicle, November 29, 2001
Media Citations
All eyes on Aurora courtroom as first of three trials begins in Elijah McClain’s death
Denver Post, September 15, 2023
Minor police encounters plummet after LAPD put limits on stopping drivers and pedestrians
Los Angeles Times, November 14, 2022
Bay Area leaders react to mass shooting in Buffalo
KRON4 Bay Area, May 15, 2022
Stopped by police in San Diego? A lot depends on where you live, drive
San Diego Union-Tribune, January 16, 2022
FBI use-of-force database at risk amid low participation
Marin Independent Journal, January 1, 2022
Webcasts
Reimagining Policing
Nikki Fortunato Bas, Jack Glaser, Danielle Outlaw, Dan Lindheim,
Date: February 23, 2021 Duration: 59 minutes
Surreal Politics: How Anxiety About Race, Gender and Inequality is Shaping the Presidential Campaign
Sarah Anzia, Henry E. Brady, Jack Glaser, Jonathan Stein, Maria Echaveste (Moderator),
Date: October 5, 2016 Duration: 56 minutes
Suspect Race: Causes & Consequences of Racial Profiling
Jack Glaser, Paul Figueroa, Henry E. Brady,
Date: February 2, 2015 Duration: 54 minutes
Book: Suspect Race -- Causes & Consequences of Racial Profiling
Read some and/or order here...
Last updated on 04/24/2024