170 likes | 194 Views
This chapter explores the foundations, causes, effects, and remedies of prejudice. Topics covered include group formation, ethnocentrism, stereotyping, and the effects of prejudice and discrimination. Strategies for overcoming prejudice are also discussed.
E N D
Chapter 7 Prejudice: Foundations, Causes, Effects & Remedies
Prejudice: Unavoidable Factors • Group Formation • Ethnocentrism • Stereotyping
Group Formation • Fosters survival, social identity • “we” part of the self-concept • Social Identity theory – We like our own groups better to lift our own self-esteem. • Taijfel (1971) “over- and underestimators” • In-group bias – give own group most rewards • Bias stronger when in minority and strongly identify with group.
Group Formation • Outgroup bias • Downgrading others not in your group • Also applies to norms and customs, see behavior or ways of other groups as strange or even wrong • People with diverse group memberships exhibit less outgroup bias.
Ethnocentrism • By-product of social/cultural upbringing • Rules define culture & expected behavior • Need to honor them in order to successfully adapt and to preserve culture • Contributes to the successful function of a society
Inflexible Ethnocentrism • Judging others as wrong, simply because they are different • Flexible ethnocentrism is less judgmental.
Becoming More Flexibly Ethnocentric • Key lies in the awareness of our own ethnocentrism. • 1. Become consciously aware of own rules & how they affect perceptions & judgments of others. • 2. Recognize that other cultures have their own norms. • 3. Try to understand other cultures’ norms. • 4. Use all this to develop empathy.
Stereotypes • A generalization about a group of people that assumes members share common characteristics. • Mental shortcuts that prepare us to interact • Often based on a “grain of truth” • Often exaggerated caricatures • May become self-fulfilling prophicies
Social Contributors to Stereotypes • Confirmation bias • Fundamental attribution error • Outgroup homogeneity effect
The Tendency to Stereotype • Personal variables • Need for structure & predictability • Powerful position • Cognitive efficiency? • Less to lose? • Situational variables • Good mood • Emotionally aroused • Mentally distracted
Prejudice & Discrimination • Prejudice is pre-judgment • It may be positive or negative • It is usually considered to be negative • It is often based on stereotypes • Factors it is often based on include; • Age, sex, race, ethnic identity, weight, religion, disability, sexual orientation
Prejudice • It often becomes more pronounced when the dominant group begins to feel threatened by an influx of immigrants. • Public racial prejudice has declined in the United States. • Has prejudice gone “underground”?
Prejudice • Realistic group conflict theory. • People become prejudiced against those with whom they must compete for scarce resources such as jobs.
Prejudice • Robbers’ Cave Experiment (Sherif, 1966) • 22 white, middle-class, 11-year old boys • 2-week summer camp • Eagles vs. Rattlers • Mutual competition, vandalism, food fights, name-calling, etc. • Sherif brought the group together through a common goal
Factors in Developing Prejudice • Social learning from family & friends • Relative deprivation – perceiving that others are better off than we are • Emotions (threat) • Discrimination (unfair treatment)
Effects of Prejudice & Discrimination • Lowered self-esteem • Crocker et al. (1991) • Targets of discrimination feel less personal control • Stereotype threat (Steele, 1997) • Anxiety from the threat inteferes with performance • May begin to avoid situation(s)
Overcoming Prejudice • Superordinate Goal • Robbers’ Cave • Jigsaw Classroom (Aronson, 1978-2000) • Mindfulness