You are here

Beyond Race Cards in America's Pastime: An Appreciative Reply to Findlay and Santos

Description: 
In this reply, I salute the correction, replication, and extensions carried out by David Findlay and John Santos (2012) based on my jointly authored paper Hewitt, Muñoz, Oliver, and Regoli (2005). I expound briefly on why, even though we and they have found no statistically significant race-discrimination effect in baseball card prices, we should not be quick to diminish the role of racial thinking and racial preference—especially as the sample was restricted to Hall of Famers.
Record Format: 
application/pdf
2012-05-01T07:00:00Z
Subject: 
Baseball cards -- Collectors and collecting -- United States
Baseball cards -- Prices
Race discrimination
Economics
Other Economics
Race and Ethnicity
Type: 
text
Raw Url: 
http://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/do/oai/?metadataPrefix=&verb=GetRecord&identifier=oai:pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu:chla_fac-1000
Source: 
Chicano/Latino Studies Faculty Publications and Presentations
Repository Record Id: 
oai:pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu:chla_fac-1000
SetSpec: 
publication:clas
publication:equity
publication:communities
publication:chla_fac
publication:chla
Record Title: 
Beyond Race Cards in America's Pastime: An Appreciative Reply to Findlay and Santos
https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/chla_fac/1
https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/context/chla_fac/article/1000/viewcontent/Munoz_beyond_race_cards.pdf
Database: 
Resource OE Format: 
randomness