Sandra Schwartz Tangri
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Sandra Florence Schwartz Tangri (August 27, 1936 – June 11, 2003) was a
feminist Feminism is a range of socio-political movements and ideologies that aim to define and establish the political, economic, personal, and social equality of the sexes. Feminism incorporates the position that society prioritizes the male po ...
psychologist and distinguished university professor of social psychology and the
psychology of women Feminine psychology or the psychology of women is an approach that focuses on social, economic, and political issues confronting women all throughout their lives. It emerged as a reaction to male-dominated developmental theories such as Sigmund F ...
. Tangri conducted pioneering research on the lives of women who graduated college and embarked on careers dominated by men. She studied women's motivations in choosing a career and their experiences of
sexual harassment Sexual harassment is a type of harassment involving the use of explicit or implicit sexual overtones, including the unwelcome and inappropriate promises of rewards in exchange for sexual favors. Sexual harassment includes a range of actions fro ...
. Tangri is known for conducting the Women's Life Paths Study, a longitudinal study extending over a period of 25 years that examined the life paths and experiences of the female graduates of the University of Michigan Class of 1967. Besides her scholarly work, Tangri was a political and social activist involved in the gender equality movement in the 1990s.


Biography

Sandra Schwartz was born in St. Louis and raised in Los Angeles in a working-class Jewish immigrant family. Her father, Haim Schwartz, was a Yiddish published poet from a town in Belarus. Tangri credited her feminist identity, and the basis for her politics to her father's strong devotion to social justice and her experience growing up in a working-class Jewish family. Tangri attended Los Angeles City College and Reed College. She went on to receive a B.A. in psychology with honors from the University of California, Berkeley. She furthered her education by receiving a M.A in psychology at Wayne State University in 1964, and a Ph.D. in Social Psychology at the University of Michigan in 1969. Her dissertation title "Role-innovation in occupational choice among college women" was a longitudinal study involving 200 women from the University of Michigan Class of 1967. Tangri taught at Douglass College, Rutgers University, and at Richmond College which later merged to form the College of Staten Island. Tangri left academia in 1974 to become Director of the Office of Research at the United States Commission of Civil Rights, where she remained for five years. Tangri was a senior research associate at the Urban Institute from 1982 to 1985. From 1980 until her retirement in 1998, Tangri was a professor of social psychology at Howard University. At Howard University, Tangri's research focused on the educational and work experiences of educated African American women. Tangri's research was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, the MacArthur Foundation, the
National Institute of Education The National Institute of Education (NIE) is an autonomous institute of Nanyang Technological University (NTU) in Singapore. Ranked 12th in the world and 2nd in Asia by the QS World University Rankings in the subject of Education in 2015, the ...
, and the Labor Department. Tangri was a Fulbright fellow to New Zealand in 1991. She was an elected Fellow of the American Psychological Association and served on the Council of the Society for the Psychology of Women. Tangri's marriage to Shanti Tangri ended in divorce. Tangri died on June 11, 2003, in Bethesda, Maryland from lung cancer.


Awards

Tangri received the Carolyn Wood Sherif Award for contributions to the Psychology of Women and Gender from Division 35 of the American Psychological Association (Society for the Psychology of Women) in 1999. Tangri received the Distinguished Publication Award from the Association for Women in Psychology for her 1976 article "A feminist perspective on ethical issues in population programs". APA Division 35 (Society for the Psychology of Women) previously awarded the Sandra Schwartz Tangri Memorial Award for Graduate Student Research focusing on issues such as "sexual harassment, discrimination, reproductive rights, concerns of ethnic and sexual minority women and the mentoring of first-generation college students."


Books

* Mednick, Martha T.S., Sandra S. Tangri, & Lois W. Hoffman, (Eds.) (1975). ''Women and achievement: Social and motivational analysis.'' Hemisphere Publishing Corporation.


Representative publications

* Mednick, Martha Shuch; Tangri, Sandra Schwartz (1972). "New Social Psychological Perspectives on Women". ''Journal of Social Issues''. 28 (2): 1–16. * Schwartz, Michael; Tangri, Sandra Schwartz (1965). "A Note on Self-Concept as an Insulator Against Delinquency". ''American Sociological Review''. 30 (6): 922–926. * Tangri, Sandra Schwartz (1972). "Determinants of Occupational Role Innovation Among College Women". ''Journal of Social Issues''. 28 (2): 177–199. * Tangri, Sandra Schwartz (1976). "A Feminist Perspective on Some Ethical Issues in Population Programs". ''Signs.'' 1: 895–904. * Tangri, Sandra Schwartz (2001). "Some Life Lessons". ''Psychology of Women Quarterly.'' 23: 98–102. * Tangri, Sandra Schwartz; Burt, Martha R.; Johnson, Leanor B. (1982). "Sexual Harassment at Work: Three Explanatory Models". ''Journal of Social Issues''. 38 (4): 33–54.


References


External links


Sandra Schwartz Tangri
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Psychology's Feminist Voices Psychology's Feminist Voices (PFV) is an online, multimedia digital archive containing the stories of women of psychology's past and contemporary feminist psychologists who have shaped and continue to transform the discipline of psychology. It ho ...
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tangri, Sandra 1936 births 2003 deaths American social psychologists American women psychologists College of Staten Island faculty Gender equality Howard University faculty Jewish psychologists People associated with feminism Reed College alumni Sexual harassment University of California, Berkeley alumni University of Michigan alumni Wayne State University alumni American people of Belarusian-Jewish descent 20th-century American psychologists