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Key Concepts
How do stereotypes, prejudice,
and discrimination diff er?
How can we reduce prejudice
and discrimination?
M O D U L E 5 4
Prejudice and Discrimination
What do you think when someone says, “He’s African American,” “She’s Chinese,”
or “That’s a woman driver”?
If you’re like most people, you’ll probably automatically form some sort of
impression of what each person is like. Most likely your impression is based on
a
stereotype, a set of generalized beliefs and expectations about a specifi c group
and its members. Stereotypes, which may be negative or positive, grow out of our
tendency to categorize and organize the vast amount of information we encounter
in our everyday lives. All stereotypes share the common feature of oversimplifying
the world: We view individuals not in terms of their unique, personal character-
istics, but also in terms of characteristics we attribute to all the members of a
particular group.
Stereotypes can lead to
prejudice, a negative (or positive) evaluation of a group
and its members. For instance, racial prejudice occurs when a member of a racial
group is evaluated in terms of race and not because of his or her own characteristics
or abilities. Although prejudice can be positive (”I love the Irish”), social psychologists
have focused on understanding the roots of negative prejudice (”I hate immigrants”).
Common stereotypes and forms of prejudice involve race, religion, ethnicity, and
gender. Over the years, various groups have been called “lazy” or “shrewd” or
“cruel” with varying degrees of regularity by those who are not members of that
group. Even today, despite major progress toward reducing legally sanctioned forms
of prejudice, such as school segregation, stereotypes remain (Eberhardt et al., 2004;
Pettigrew, 2004; Hunt, Seifert, & Armenta, 2006).
Even people who on the surface appear to be unprejudiced may harbor hidden
prejudice. For example, when white participants in experiments are shown faces on
a computer screen so rapidly that they cannot consciously perceive the faces, they
react more negatively to black than to white faces—an example of what has been
called
modern racism (Dovidio, Gaertner, & Pearson, 2005; Liu & Mills, 2006; Pearson,
Dovidio, & Pratto, 2007).
Although usually backed by little or no evidence, stereotypes can have harmful
consequences. Acting on negative stereotypes results in
discrimination —behavior
directed toward individuals on the basis of their membership in a particular group.
Discrimination can lead to exclusion from jobs, neighborhoods, and educational
opportunities, and it may result in lower salaries and benefi ts for members of specifi c
groups. Discrimination can also result in more favorable treatment to favored
groups—for example, when an employer hires a job applicant of his or her own racial
group because of the applicant’s race (Avery, McKay, & Wilson, 2008; Pager & Shep-
herd, 2008).
Stereotyping not only leads to overt discrimination, but also can cause members
of stereotyped groups to behave in ways that refl ect the stereotype through a phe-
nomenon known as the
self-fulfi lling prophecy . Self-fulfi lling prophecies are expecta-
tions about the occurrence of a future event or behavior that act to increase the
likelihood the event or behavior will occur. For example, if people think that mem-
bers of a specifi c group lack ambition, they may treat them in a way that actually
brings about a lack of ambition (Oskamp, 2000; Seibt & Förster, 2005; Madon, Willard,
& Guyll, 2006).
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