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Theories of prejudice Duckitt, 2003

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Cognitive structures, organising attributes (consensually) associated with social groups ... competence and incompetence, rationality and irrationality ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Theories of prejudice Duckitt, 2003


1
Theories of prejudice(Duckitt, 2003)
  • Prejudice negative intergroup attitude
  • Categorisation (assimilation, differentiation)
  • Structure of attitudes
  • Negative stereotypes (cognitive)
  • Negative feelings (affective)
  • Negative inclinations (behavioural)
  • Manifestations of a single negative dimension ?

2
Negative stereotypes
  • Cognitive structures, organising attributes
    (consensually) associated with social groups
  • Expectancy about group, tendency to confirm
  • Stereotypes and discriminatory behaviour only
    weakly related

3
Negative affect
  • Anger, irritation, anxiety
  • Unconscious, automatic, implicit
  • Generally, more predictive of discriminatory
    behaviour than stereotypes

4
Negative behaviour
  • Social distance, avoidance of contact
  • Usually consensual within-group conception of
    (ethnic) outgroup hierarchy
  • Discriminatory behaviour (denial of equal
    treatment on the basis of category membership)
  • Violence, aggression on the basis of category
    membership (hate crime, ethnic violence)

5
Varieties of prejudice
  • New racisms
  • Symbolic racism (Sears), modern racism
    (McConahay), racial resentment (Kinder), subtle
    racism (Pettigrew)
  • Reflecting values such protestant work ethic
    (PWE) and conservatism, anti-Black affect,
    socialisation hypothesis,
  • Aversive racism (Gaertner Dovidio)
  • Covert negative feelings, self-monitoring and
    rationalisation
  • Ambivalent racism (Katz Hass)
  • Coexistence of positive and negative feelings and
    values (humanitarianism and PWE)

6
  • Differences between old and new forms of
    racism and prejudice
  • A matter of
  • degree,
  • quality, or
  • social function ?

7
New racismsCommonalities and missing parts
  • Despite differences in underlying motivations
  • Empirical similarity (? measures of symbolic,
    modern, subtle racism, racial resentment)
  • Social acceptability, desirability, norms
  • Rejection of categorical, absolute, essentialist
    judgements
  • instead
  • Individualised (conduct-based) judgements, value
    violation
  • Affective judgements (e.g., uneasiness)
  • Butexplanations strongly based on individual
    motivations, only marginal reference to social
    and ideological functions
  • ? link to group dynamics is neglected

8
Social functionsof old and new racisms
  • Beforejustify segregation, group oppression,
    intergroup power relation, colonial rule
  • Afterjustify discrimination in a diverse
    society, justify (mask) inequality (to account
    for subordinate status of minority groups with
    individual deficiencies and value violation)

9
From old to new
  • Change from old to new forms of racism reflects
    diversification, multiculturalism, pluralism of
    modern societies
  • Between-group judgements(categorical
    differentiation)
  • Within-group judgements(individual value
    violation)

10
Other developmentsin prejudice research
  • Essentialism (Hoffmann Hurst, Rothbart
    Taylor, Yzerbyt, N. Haslam)
  • Subhumanisation (Billig, Leyens, Pérez)
  • Intergroup level explanations of prejudice based
    on economic interdependence
  • Group position theory (Bobo)
  • System justification (Jost)
  • Intergroup structure and stereotype content
    (Fiske, Glick)
  • Social representational approach to stereotype
    content(Joffe Staerklé)

11
Group position theory (L. Bobo)
  • Race relations in U.S., subordinate position of
    Blacks
  • Prejudice and racism reflects dominant and
    subordinate position of social groups
  • Prejudice likely to develop when position of
    dominant groups is threatened by subordinate
    groups (encroachment)

12
When minorities supporttheir own subordination
  • System justification (Jost)
  • Social dominance theory (Sidanius)
  • ? Subordinate groups endorse beliefs, stereotype
    content that contributes to their own
    subordination

13
Stereotype content model(Fiske Glick)
  • Stereotype content is systematic
  • Reflects structural interdependence between
    groups
  • Status Competition
  • Competence Warmth

14
Stereotype content model
15
Stereotype content model
  • Illustration JSI 1999
  • PrecursorsG. Allport, S. Asch, M. Jackman
  • Innovations
  • stereotype content theory
  • prejudice can be positive
  • combination of positive and negative attributes
    as powerful justification strategy (in
    paternalistic prejudice)

16
Social representational approach to stereotype
content(Joffe Staerklé)
  • Perceived and constructed value violation as
    source of stereotype content
  • Self-control ethos(Mind, Destiny, and Body)
  • Stereotypes reflect (lack of) perceived
    individualism and self-control

17
The three facets of self-control and their
implications on stereotype content
  • Self-control over mind
  • competence and incompetence, rationality and
    irrationality
  • intelligent, rational, emotional, foolish
  • Self-control over destiny
  • long-term autonomy, self-sustainability,
    responsibility, social usefulness
  • hard-working, lazy, irresponsible, profiteer
  • Self-control over body
  • morality, civilisedness, order
  • dirty, pervert, disorderly, animal-like,
    uncivilised

18
Social representational approach to stereotype
content
  • PrecursorsAllport, Rokeach, Biernat, Crandall,
    Esses
  • Stereotype content does not necessarily require
    economic interdependence
  • Completes the Fiske model with the body control
    dimension (? homosexuals)

19
Social representational approach to stereotype
content
  • Stresses the social construction and ideological
    functions of stereotype content
  • Multiple forms of social exclusion (economic,
    social, cultural)
  • Flexible, analytical, non-causal, functional
    model
  • The three dimensions of common reference
    knowledge (organising principles)
  • Commonality and individual positioning
  • Stresses emotional, affective sources of
    stereotype content (e.g., disgust)

20
Dual process model of prejudice(John Duckitt)
  • Predicted causal sequence
  • Socialisation? Personality? Social
    worldview? Ideological attitudes? Intergroup
    attitudes
  • Two paths leading to prejudice, by way of
    opposing motivational goal schemasconformity
    vs. dominance

21
Dual process model of prejudice
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24
Some conclusions
  • Multiple forms of prejudice and exclusion,
    pluralist prejudice
  • Multiple forms of justification of prejudice
  • Lay reasoning underlying prejudice
  • Functional, regulatory approach (prejudice is
    socially useful, fulfils functions, regulates
    group life)

25
Some conclusions group life
  • Explanations of prejudice at the group-level,
    both within and between groups
  • Within groupsindividual deviance, based on
    ingroup values
  • Between groupscategorical difference, based on
    shared attributes

26
Some conclusions content
  • Prejudice and stereotype content seems to be
    organised around two general content dimensions
  • Economic interdependence and exchange,
    instrumental attributes
  • Group belongingness, ingroup values, morality,
    culture
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