Michelle K. Williams
Chief Of Staff/Extradepartmental_Programs
Storrs Mansfield
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Scholarly Contributions
17 Scholarly Contributions
Why Being Out About Concealable Stigmatized Identities May Benefit Health
2014
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Visible and concealable stigmatized identities and mental health: Experiences of racial discrimination and anticipated stigma.
2020
Research Type: Journal Article
The role of a stigmatized identity in psychological distress: Examining anticipated stigma, centrality, salience, internalization, & outness for people with concealable stigmatized identities
Research Type: Journal Article
The intersection of visible and concealed stigmatized identities.
2014
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
The Moderating Role of Centrality on the Association Between Internalized Intimate Partner Violence-Related Stigma and Concealment of Physical IPV
2017
Research Type: Journal Article
The American identity measure: Development and validation across ethnic group and immigration generation
2012
Research Type: Journal Article
Providing Effective Interventions: Does Cultural Competence Really Matter?
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Out and healthy: Being more ÒoutÓ about a concealable stigmatized identity may boost the health benefits of social support
2016
Research Type: Journal Article
Out and healthy: Being more "out" about a concealable stigmatized identity may boost the health benefits of social support.
2015
Research Type: Journal Article
Male victims of domestic violence: Perceptions of incident seriousness and intervention need
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Good choices, bad choices: Relationship between quality of identity commitments and psychosocial functioning
2013
Research Type: Journal Article
From discrimination to internalized mental illness stigma: The mediating roles of anticipated discrimination and anticipated stigma.
2015
Research Type: Journal Article
Examining effects of anticipated stigma, centrality, salience, internalization, and outness on psychological distress for people with concealable stigmatized identities
2014
Research Type: Journal Article