The American Behavioral Scientist
Overview
The American Behavioral Scientist is a renowned interdisciplinary journal that publishes cutting-edge research in the field of social and behavioral sciences. With a focus on understanding human behavior and society, it covers a wide range of topics including psychology, sociology, anthropology, political science, and communication. The journal provides a platform for scholars to explore and discuss theories, methodologies, and empirical findings, making it an essential resource for academics, researchers, and practitioners in the field.
Details
Details
Abbr.
Am Behav Sci
Publisher
Sage Publications
Start
1960
End
Continuing
Frequency
Monthly, 2000-
p-ISSN
0002-7642
e-ISSN
1552-3381
Country
United States
Language
English
Specialty
Social Sciences
Metrics
Metrics
h-index / Ranks: 1858
132
SJR / Ranks: 3744
1012
CiteScore / Ranks: 4651
5.30
Recent Articles
1.
Black L, Wolfe A, Han S
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
67(8):963-981.
PMID: 38603357
This article draws on the deliberative play framework to examine empirical examples of storytelling in an online deliberative forum: The Oregon Citizen Assembly (ORCA) Pilot on COVID-19 Recovery. ORCA engaged...
2.
Dobransky K, Hargittai E
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
65(12):1698-1720.
PMID: 38603151
The COVID-19 pandemic and the ensuing stay-at-home orders caused tremendous restrictions in social contacts, which led to increasing use of the internet for daily tasks and social interactions. As prior...
3.
Yan X, Qu T, Sperber N, Lu J, Fan M, Cornwell B
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
65(14):1901-1928.
PMID: 38603146
Expanding on recent research on the transmission of COVID-19 via social networks, this article argues that exposure to familial and other close contacts who already have the disease may increase...
4.
Dutta M
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
65(10):1302-1322.
PMID: 38603114
I draw on the key tenets of the culture-centered approach to co-construct the everyday negotiations of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) among low-wage male Bangladeshi migrant workers in Singapore. The culture-centered...
5.
Robinson L, Schulz J, Ragnedda M, Pait H, Kwon K, Khilnani A
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
65(12):1603-1607.
PMID: 38603108
This collection sheds light on the cascading crises engendered by COVID-19 on many aspects of society from the economic to the digital. This issue of the brings together scholarship examining...
6.
Kuk J, Schachter A, Faber J, Besbris M
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
65(12):1623-1648.
PMID: 38603106
Past research has demonstrated the racially and spatially uneven impacts of economic shocks and environmental disasters on various markets. In this article, we examine if and how the first few...
7.
Pandey K, Parrenas R, Sabio G
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
65(10):1287-1301.
PMID: 38603104
In this article, we examine the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the labor conditions of domestic workers in the epicenter of the United States. We focus our analysis on...
8.
Martuscelli P
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
65(10):1342-1364.
PMID: 38603086
Refugees tend to be a neglected population during health emergencies. This article studies how the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak in Brazil affected forcibly displaced people considering their intersectional multiple identities. I...
9.
Mookerjee D, Chakravarty S, Roy S, Tagat A, Mukherjee S
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
65(10):1426-1444.
PMID: 38603078
India's coronavirus lockdown forced low-wage migrant workers to return from the city to the home towns and villages from which they came. Pre-pandemic living and working conditions were already stressful...
10.
Kaur-Gill S, Qin-Liang Y, Hassan S
Am Behav Sci
. 2024 Apr;
65(10):1406-1425.
PMID: 38603066
Migrant domestic work is performed in precariously (im)mobile working conditions that mark the subaltern body in a state of constant lived experience with and in strife. In Singapore, the structural...