T. Cuthbert Day Data-verified
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Researcher
faculty
Research Areas
Links
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
T. Cuthbert Day's research centers on the psychological impacts of institutional betrayal, particularly for racial justice advocates within predominantly white institutions. Their work, as evidenced by recent publications in 2025, investigates the harms experienced by individuals in these environments. Day's scholarly contributions include 37 publications, which have garnered approximately 100 citations, reflecting a research impact indicated by an h-index of 5. Collaboration is a notable aspect of Day's work, with shared publications with Evan Hinchliffe, Christin A. Mujica, and Ana J. Bridges, all affiliated with the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. This indicates an active engagement within the academic community at their institution.
Metrics
- h-index: 5
- Publications: 37
- Citations: 100
Selected Publications
-
Protecting Racial Justice Advocates from the Harms of Institutional Betrayal at Predominantly White Institutions (2025)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Protecting Racial Justice Advocates from the Harms of Institutional Betrayal at Predominantly White Institutions
- Protecting Racial Justice Advocates from the Harms of Institutional Betrayal at Predominantly White Institutions
- Protecting Racial Justice Advocates from the Harms of Institutional Betrayal at Predominantly White Institutions
- Protecting Racial Justice Advocates from the Harms of Institutional Betrayal at Predominantly White Institutions
- Protecting Racial Justice Advocates from the Harms of Institutional Betrayal at Predominantly White Institutions
- Protecting Racial Justice Advocates from the Harms of Institutional Betrayal at Predominantly White Institutions
- Protecting Racial Justice Advocates from the Harms of Institutional Betrayal at Predominantly White Institutions
- Protecting Racial Justice Advocates from the Harms of Institutional Betrayal at Predominantly White Institutions
Similar Researchers
Based on overlapping research topics