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Race and Ethnic Group Stratification:. Beyond “We” and “They”. Soc 100. Dr. Santos. What Characterizes Race and Ethnic Groups?. Minority groups Distinguishable Excluded or denied full participation Defined and valued differently usually less favorably
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Race and Ethnic Group Stratification: Beyond “We” and “They” Soc 100 Dr. Santos
What Characterizes Race and Ethnic Groups? • Minority groups • Distinguishable • Excluded or denied full participation • Defined and valued differently • usually less favorably • Stereotyped, ridiculed, condemned, or otherwise defamed • Develop collective identities
What Characterizes Race and Ethnic Groups? • Minority groups are formed historically and sustained by ideology & social practice • Dominant groups are not always a numerical majority, but always hold power • Ethnic and racial groups are the most common minority groups in the world, but also castes, indigenous tribes, oppressed nationalities
The Concept of Race • Race is a group within the human species that is identified by a society as presumably having certain biologically inherited physical characteristics that are significant • Racial classifications have been based on numerous physical characteristics, usually accompanying European colonial expansion in the American, Asia, and Africa. • Became highly “academic” in the 19th century
Origins of the Concept of “Race” • Race relation problems are social-historical in origin • Racist doctrines lack any scientific basis • Pre-Darwin: climate theories, polygenesis vs. monogenesis • In the 1970s, the United Nations issued a “Statement on Race” that stated: • All people are born free and equal both in dignity and in rights • Racism stultifies personal development • (Racial) conflicts cost nations money and resources • Racism foments international conflict
Social Construction of Race: Symbolic Interaction Analysis • Social significance is the idea from Symbolic interaction theory that social consequences constitute reality: “when people believe something is real, then it becomes real in its consequences.” • All individuals classify objects, including humans • People assigned group membership, in part, on physical appearance as an easy classificatory scheme • Classifications are used to scientifically study humans • Classifications can provide individuals with an identity
The Significance of Race versus Class • Racial stratification was the central stratification system in the US for many years • Inequality between Blacks and Whites persist • Residential segregation persists • Wealth & income inequality persist • Socioeconomic indicators show persistent inequality • The class division of Black America is growing • Two in five African Americans are middle-class • A Black underclass persists in inner-city areas
Ethnic Groups • Ethnic groups are groups where membership is based on shared cultural heritage and is often connected with a national or geographic identity • Many racial groups are ethnic groups • Some ethnic groups concentrated in ethnic enclaves • The federal government plays a central role in creating ethnic groups & regulating ethnic relations
Processes that Keep Minorities Unequal from the Dominant Group
Prejudice and Racism: Micro-Level Analysis • Prejudice are attitudes (thoughts and feelings) that prejudge/devalue a group, usually negatively and not based on facts • Stereotyping is the categorization of large numbers of people by prejudiced individuals • Often distorted, oversimplified, or exaggerated ideas • Passed down over generations through the culture and tradition • Applied to all members of a group • Used to justify prejudice, discrimination, and unequal distribution of resource • A self-fulfilling prophesy is the incorporation of stereotyped behavior into an individual’s view of themselves
Frustration-aggression theory is a theory which states that acts of prejudice and discrimination are motivated by anger and frustration individuals feel when they cannot achieve their work or goals Scapegoating is a form of aggressive action motivated by frustration against minority groups because an individual is unable to vent frustration toward the real target or cause Explanations of Prejudice: Micro-Level Analysis
Racism • Racism is any attitude, belief, or institutional arrangement that favors one racial group over another; this favoritism may result in intentional or unintentional consequences for minority groups • Ideological racism • Symbolic racism • Institutional racism
Discrimination: Meso-Level Analysis • Discrimination is actions taken against members of a minority group • Individual discrimination is action taken against minority group members which can take the form of exclusion, avoidance, or violence • Institutional discrimination intentional and unintentional actions engrained in the normal or routine part of the way an organization operates that have consequences that restrict minority group members • Side-effect discrimination • Past-in-present discrimination • Discrimination and prejudice are often found working together and reinforce one another
Dominant and Minority Group Contact: Macro-Level Analysis • The form of dominant and minority group relations in a nation depend on several factors: • Who has more power • The quest of the dominant group for scare resources, including land, labor, and commodities • The cultural norms of each group: ethnocentrism • The social histories of the group • The times and circumstances
Theoretical Explanations of Dominant-Minority Group Relations: Conflict Theory • Privileged people perpetuate prejudice and discrimination against minority group members to keep privileges and resources • Three critical factors contribute to hostility over resources • If two groups of people are identifiably different then “we” versus “they” thinking may develop • If the groups come into conflict over scarce resources that both groups want for themselves, hostilities are very likely to arise • If one group has much more power than the other, intense dislike between the two groups and misrepresentation of each group by the other is virtually inescapable
Theoretical Explanations of Dominant-Minority Group Relations: Conflict Theory • Split Labor Market theory -- characterizes the labor market as having two levels • Primary labor market, held by native workers • Secondary labor market, reserved for inmigrants
Theoretical Explanations of Dominant-Minority Group Relations: Structural Functional Theory • A cheap pool of labors who are in and out of work serves several functions for society • A cheap pool of labor provides a labor force to do “dirty work” • They make occupations which service the poor possible • They buy goods others do not want • They set examples for others of what not to be • They allow others to feel good about giving to charity
Theoretical Explanations of Dominant-Minority Group Relations: Structural Functional Theory • Prejudice, racism, and discrimination are dysfunctional for society in many ways • They result in a loss of human resources • They cost society due to poverty and crime • They maintain hostilities between groups • And they fuel disrespect for those in power
Theoretical Explanations of Dominant-Minority Group Relations: Cultural Explanations • Prejudice and discrimination are passed on from generation to generation through cultural transmission through socialization, institutional structures, and media stereotypes • Stereotypes limit the opportunities available to minority group members
The Effects of Prejudice, Racism, and Discrimination • Individual Effects • Unequal life chances, health, and access to property • Victims can also have low self-esteem from devalued status in society • Organizations and communities • Lose the talents of individuals they exclude • Government subsidies cost millions but made necessary by lack of opportunities for minority individuals • Cultural costs • Attempts to justify racism by stereotyping and labeling
Minority Reactions to Prejudice, Discrimination, and Racism • Five common reactions to dealing with a minority group status: • Assimilation • Acceptance • Avoidance • Aggression • Change-oriented Collective Action
Policies to Reduce Prejudice, Racism, and Discrimination • Micro-Level Policies • Individual or Small Group Therapy • Meso-Level Policies • Organized group contact • Macro-Level Policies • Lobbying, educational information dissemination, canvassing • Government agencies • Civil Rights Commission, Fair Employment Practices Commission, Equal Employment Opportunity Commission • Legislation • Nonviolent Resistance • Protest marches, rallies, watchdog monitoring, and boycotts
Policies to Reduce Prejudice, Racism, and Discrimination • Affirmative Action is a social policy created to change the unequal distribution of resources • Strict affirmative action is a policy that involves affirmative or positive steps to make sure that unintended discrimination does not occur • Quota systems are policies that require employers to hire a certain percentage of minorities • Preference policies are policies based on the belief that sometime people must be treated differently in order to treat them fairly and to create equality
Global Movements for Human Rights: Macro-Level Policies • Global issues and ethnic conflicts in the social world are interrelated • The United Nations passed a Declaration of Universal Human Rights after the Holocaust to ensure that every global citizen is awarded particular human rights • National governments and privately funded advocacy groups work for international human rights