Noah Carl
British sociologist
Noah Carl's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Sociology
Noah Carl's Degrees
- PhD Sociology University of Oxford
- Masters Sociology University of Oxford
Why Is Noah Carl Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Noah Carl is a British sociologist and intelligence researcher. He was investigated and subsequently dismissed from his position as a Toby Jackman Newton Trust Research Fellow at St Edmund's College, Cambridge after over 500 academics signed a letter repudiating his research and public stance on race and intelligence, calling it "ethically suspect and methodologically flawed", and stating their concern that "racist pseudoscience is being legitimised through association with the University of Cambridge." An investigation by the college concluded that Carl's work was "poor scholarship" which violated standards of academic integrity, and that Carl had collaborated with right-wing extremists. Some newspaper columnists criticised the decision to dismiss Carl as an attack on academic freedom. Others questioned whether St Edmund's had failed to properly vet him before he was hired in the first place.
Noah Carl's Published Works
Published Works
- Generalized Trust and Intelligence in the United States (2014) (72)
- European but not European enough: An explanation for Brexit (2018) (61)
- Verbal intelligence is correlated with socially and economically liberal beliefs (2014) (59)
- Does Activism in Social Science Explain Conservatives’ Distrust of Scientists? (2018) (33)
- IQ AND SOCIOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ACROSS REGIONS OF THE UK (2015) (30)
- Cognitive ability and political beliefs in the United States (2015) (29)
- Scientific literacy, optimism about science and conservatism (2016) (24)
- Does intelligence have a U-shaped relationship with leftism? (2015) (17)
- IQ and socio-economic development across local authorities of the UK (2016) (14)
- Communicating intelligence research: Media misrepresentation, the Gould Effect, and unexpected forces (2018) (14)
- Does intelligence explain the association between generalized trust and economic development (2014) (13)
- Red Lines and Compromises: Mapping Underlying Complexities of Brexit Preferences (2018) (12)
- How Stifling Debate Around Race, Genes and IQ Can Do Harm (2018) (11)
- Can intelligence explain the overrepresentation of liberals and leftists in American academia (2015) (11)
- The ultimate causes of Brexit: history, culture, and geography (2016) (11)
- Cognitive ability and party identity in the United States (2014) (10)
- Brexit : the causes and consequences of the UK's decision to leave the EU (2017) (9)
- A scientometric analysis of controversies in the field of intelligence research (2019) (9)
- Human Rights: Why Countries Differ (2018) (8)
- Indigenous Ecuadorian children: Parental education, parental wealth and children's cognitive ability level (2017) (6)
- Leave and Remain voters’ knowledge of the EU after the referendum of 2016 (2019) (5)
- Ethnicity and electoral fraud in Britain (2017) (5)
- Cognitive Ability and Political Preferences in Denmark (2017) (4)
- The Fallacy of Equating the Hereditarian Hypothesis with Racism (2019) (4)
- Net Opposition to Immigrants of Different Nationalities Correlates Strongly with Their Arrest Rates in the UK (2016) (4)
- Unprovoked Mouth Gaping Behavior in Extant Crocodylia (2020) (3)
- The Political Attitudes of British Academics (2018) (3)
- The Good Country Index, Cognitive Ability and Culture (2020) (3)
- Lack of European Identity and the Failure of the Eurozone (2017) (3)
- Not just ‘the left behind’? Exploring the effects of subjective social status on Brexit-related preferences (2020) (2)
- IQ and political attitudes across British regions and local authorities (2018) (2)
- Larregue’s Critique of Cofnas et al. (2017): A Rejoinder (2018) (2)
- An Analysis of Islamist Terrorism Across Western Countries (2016) (2)
- Large, old trees define the vertical, horizontal, and seasonal distributions of a poison frog (2022) (2)
- Leavers have a better understanding of Remainers' motivations than vice versa (2018) (2)
- Are Danes’ Immigration Policy Preferences Based on Accurate Stereotypes? (2020) (2)
- The left-liberal skew of Western media (2017) (1)
- Extended Parental Care in Broad-Snouted Caiman Caiman latirostris (Daudin,1801) (Crocodylia, Alligatoridae) (2017) (1)
- Editorial: A Response to Criticisms of the OpenPsych Journals (2018) (1)
- An Analysis of COVID-19 Mortality at the Local Authority Level in England (2020) (1)
- Smart Fraction Theory (2022) (1)
- Preference for realistic art predicts support for Brexit1. (2018) (1)
- Corrigendum to “IQ and socio-economic development across local authorities of the UK” [Intelligence 55 (2016) 90–94] (2016) (1)
- A global analysis of Islamist violence (2017) (1)
- Are PPE graduates ruining Britain?: MPs who studied it at university are among the most pro-Remain (2018) (1)
- Cognitive ability and socio-political beliefs and attitudes (2017) (0)
- Comparing EU Knowledge Among Leave and Remain Voters: A Replication Study (2019) (0)
- How Stifling Debate Around Race, Genes and IQ Can Do Harm (2018) (0)
- Correction to: Large, old trees define the vertical, horizontal, and seasonal distributions of a poison frog (2022) (0)
- Larregue’s Critique of Cofnas et al. (2017): A Rejoinder (2018) (0)
- Islamist Terrorism in Western Countries: 2001-2017 (2018) (0)
- Corrigendum to “Can intelligence explain the overrepresentation of liberals and leftists in American academia?” [Intelligence 53 (2015) 181–193] (2019) (0)
- More Diversity? Talk is Cheap (2021) (0)
- Did Austerity Cause Brexit? Evidence from Aggregate Trends in Euroscepticism (2018) (0)
- The Relationship between Solar Radiation and IQ in the United Kingdom (2018) (0)
- Listening to the Experts on European Monetary Integration: Comment on Waltraud Schelkle's Response (2017) (0)
- Prevention of Armed Conflict in Europe: Comparing the Role of the EU and the US/NATO (2019) (0)
- Does Activism in Social Science Explain Conservatives’ Distrust of Scientists? (2017) (0)
- Corrigendum to “Ethnicity and electoral fraud in Britain” [Elect. Stud. 50 (2017) 128–136] (2018) (0)
- MPs Who Studied PPE at University Are Among the Most Pro-Remain (2018) (0)
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