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Chapter 9 Inequalities of Race and Ethnicity. Minorities. Minorities – a group of people w/ physical or cultural traits different from those of the dominant group Numbers alone do not make you a minority Ex. Women in the U.S. Key factors
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Minorities • Minorities – a group of people w/ physical or cultural traits different from those of the dominant group • Numbers alone do not make you a minority • Ex. Women in the U.S. • Key factors • Has distinctive physical or cultural characteristics which can be used to separate if from the majority • The minority is dominated by the majority • Majority hold an unequal share of desired goods, services, and privleges • Minority traits are often believed by the dominant majority to be inferior • Members of the minority have a common sense of identity with strong group loyalty • The majority determines who belongs to the minority through ascribed status
Race • Race – people sharing certain inherited physical characteristics that are considered important w/in a society • In sociology, social attitudes and characteristics that relate to race are more important than physical differences • No scientific evidence that connects any racial characteristic w/ innate superiority or inferiority
Ethnicity • Ethnicity – group identified by cultural, religious, or national characteristics • Ex. Language, religion, values, beliefs, norms, and customs • Ethnocentrism – main cause for negative attitudes toward ethnic minorities
Racial and Ethnic Relations • If minority groups are - accepted leads to assimilation, if rejected leads to conflict • Assimilation – the blending or fusing of minority groups into the dominant society • Anglo-conformity – the most prevalent pattern of assimilation in America • Traditional American institutions are maintained • Immigrants are accepted as long as they conform to the “accepted standards” of the society • Others must either give up or suppress its own value
Racial and Ethnic Relations • Melting Pot – all ethnic and racial minorities voluntarily blend together • Tossed salad – traditions and cultures exist side by side – many Sociologist prefer this idea • Cultural Pluralism – desire of a group to maintain some sense of identity separate from the dominant group • Accommodation – an extreme from of cultural pluralism. Occurs when a minority maintains its own culturally unique way of life
Patterns of Conflict • Genocide – the systematic effort to destroy an entire population • Most extreme version • Ex. – Holocaust, Hutu vs. Tutsis, Serbians’ “Ethnic Cleansing” of Muslims in Bosnia and Kosovo • Population transfer – a minority is forced either to move to a remote location or to leave entirely • Ex. - Native Americans • Subjugation – process by which a minority group is denied equal access to the benefits of society • Most common pattern of conflict • De jure segregation – denial of equal access based on the law • Ex. – U.S. schools before Brown vs. Board of Ed. • De facto segregation – denial of equal access based on everyday practice • Ex - Neighbors not selling homes to certain races, businesses not promoting certain minorities