Psych Ch13 - Prejudice
Benevolent sexists hold ________ stereotypes of women
positive: women are inherently more kind, empathetic, nurturing
Institutional Discrimination
practices that discriminate, legally or illegally, against a minority group by virtue of its ethnicity, gender, culture, age, sexual orientation, or other target of societal or company prejudice
Creating categories is
an adaptive mechanism: humans begin creating categories almost as soon as they're born
In the social-psychological perspective, what is a primary cause of discrimination against women in the workplace?
if women are a small minority of the occupation
suppressing prejudiced impulses requires constant effort, so
people are always on the lookout for info that will convince them they're justified in disliking the outgroup
Discrimination
unjustified negative or harmful action toward a member of a group solely because of his or her membership in that group
Prejudice
A hostile/negative attitude toward people in a distinguishable group, based solely on their membership in that group
The Implicit Association Test
A test thought to measure unconscious (implicit) prejudices according to the speed with which a person can pair a target face with a positive or negative connotation
Self-fulfilling prohpecy
An expectation of one's own or another's behavior that comes true because of the tendency of the person holding it to act in ways that bring it about
Why does jigsaw work?
It breaks down ingroup/ outgroup perceptions, places them in a favor-doing situation that causes them to like each other more, and increases empathic ability
What other explanations might account for the findings of the IAT?
It's measuring cultural stereotypes rather than people's true feelings
The contact hypothesis
That simple contact will decrease prejudice and increase the self-esteem of the minority
Realistic Conflict Theory
The idea that limited resources lead to conflict between groups and result in increased prejudice and discrimination (for scarce resources, political power, social status)
Social Identity
The part of a person's self-concept that is based on his or her identification with a nation, religious or political group, occupation, or other social affiliation
The usefulness of categorizing
We rely on our perceptions of what people with similar characteristics have been like in the past to help us determine how to react to others with the same ones
Stereotype
a generalization about a group of people in which certain traits are assigned to virtually all members of the group, regardless of actual variation of the members
what is implicit prejudice
a person holds a prejudice without being aware of it
What is a suppressed prejudice
a person knows they're prejudiced, but they choose not to express it in public
social distance
a person's reluctance to get "too close" to another group
Prejudices have a cognitive element (________) and can influence behavior (__________)
a stereotype, in the form of discrimination
Blaming the victim is motivated by
belief in a just world. Protecting ourselves from fear (situational) by convincing ourselves that the person must have done something to deserve it (dispositional)
Both sets of stereotypes are demeaning for women because
both assume that women are the weaker sex
Contact can only reduce prejudice when (6)
both groups are of equal status, both share a common goal that generates awareness of their shared interests and common humanity, contact is supported by social norms, both sides are exposed to multiple other members, there's interdependence, and it's in informal settings
Prejudice is an emotionally powerful attitude. Attitudes are made up of three components:
cognitive (beliefs/thoughts), affective (type/ intensity of emotion), and behavioral (actions)
negative associations with differences depend on (2)
context and learning
Group/institution prejudice
demands conformity to normative standards or rules in the society
Jigsaw Classroom setting
designed to reduce prejudice and raise self-esteem of children by placing them in small, multi-ethnic groups and making each child dependent on the other children in the group to learn the material
bogus pipeline
fake lie detector: people were more racist when hooked up to it because they believed that they couldn't lie or weren't expected to lie
minimal groups
in-groups artificially formed among strangers with the most trivial qualities possible
Why are stereotypes so fckin persistent
information consistent with our notions about a group will be given more attention, will be rehearsed/recalled more often, and will therefore be remembered better than contradictory info
individual prejudice
involves the ways we process information and assign meaning to observed events
Ethnocentrism and being suspicious of "others" is universal because
it aids survival by increasing people's attachment to their own group and their willingness to work together on its behalf. Also protects tribe from external threats
Hostile sexists hold ________ stereotypes of women
negative: women are inherently less intelligent, competent, brave, good at math and science, etc
People suppress prejudiced views for two reasons:
out of a genuine motivation to be less prejudiced, or to avoid being labeled racist, sexist, or homophobic
Stereotypical qualities can be (3)
physical, mental, occupational
Self-silencers in the presence of sexism/racism etc...
reduce dissonance by justifying their inaction, and thereby decrease the chance that they'll speak up in the future
emotional reasoning is
resistant to logic or evidence (distorting facts/ ignoring contradictions)
3 Counter-stereotype mindsets in test situations
self-affirmation, intelligence can grow, and test anxiety is normal
microaggressions
slights, injustices, and put-downs that minorities regularly encounter
Stereotype threat
the apprehension experienced by members of a group that their behavior might confirm a cultural stereotype
Sometimes, disconfirming evidence for prejudice can actually strengthen the stereotypical belief because
the disconfirming evidence challenges you to come up with additional reasons for holding on to prejudice
Only a few disconfirming pieces of evidence to a stereotype =
the exceptions that prove the rule
out-group homogeneity
the perception that individuals in the out-group are more similar to each other (homogenous) than they actually are, as well as more similar than members of the in-group are (They're all the same)
Self-affirmation
the practice of reminding yourself of your good qualities or experiences that made you feel successful and proud. Puts things in perspective
In-group bias
the tendency to favor members of one's own group and give them special preference over people who belong to other groups; the group can be temporary and trivial as well as significant
Normative Conformity
the tendency to go along with the group in order to fulfill the group's expectations and gain acceptance
Victims of prejudice often experience lowered self esteem because
they internalize society's views of their group being inferior, unattractive, or incompetent
If you have a stereotype of a group you know little about, and if you're not emotionally invested in that stereotype...
you're more likely to be open to information that disputes it