Sie sind auf Seite 1von 22

Prejudice

Presented By:
Nor Anisa Bt. Musa
What is Prejudice?
• Everyone comes face to face with prejudice at
some time or another.
• Prejudice is when we recognize that we feel and
act less positively towards others.
• The roots of prejudice can be found in the
cognitive and emotional processes.
• Prejudice may be perceived as acceptable and
justified
• All inequality and differential treatment is not
perceived and responded to in the same way.
The nature and origins of streotyping,
prejudice and discrimination
• Prejudice, stereotyping and discrimination often overlap.
• Prejudice is the feelings we have about particular
groups.
• Prejudice is a negative prejudgment of a group and its
individual members.
• Prejudice biases us against others based on the
person’s group.
• Prejudice is a combination of feelings, inclinations to act
and beliefs.
• Prejudice is complex and include a component of
patronizing affection.
Stereotypes
• Stereotypes are the cognitive component
attitudes towards a social group.
• To stereotypes is to generalize.
• It is a belief about what a particular group is like
• It is a belief about the personal attributes of a
group of people.
• It is sometimes over generalized, inaccurate and
resistant to new information but can be more or
less true.
Discrimination
• Discrimination is the behavioural
component or differential actions taken
towards others
• Prejudice is a negative attitude and
behaviour, also unjustified behaviour
• Attitudes and behaviour reflects our inner
convictions
• Racism and sexism are practices that
discriminate.
Stereotyping: beliefs about social
groups
• Stereotyping is the belief about social
groups in terms of the traits or
characteristics that they are deemed to
share
• Stereotypes are cognitive frameworks that
influence the processes of social
information
Gender Stereotypes
• Gender stereotypes concern the traits possessed by
females and males that distinguish the two genders.
• Women are perceived as high on warmth but low on
competence
• Woman are low in status
• Men are perceived as decisive, assertive and
accomplished but aggressive, insensitive and arrogant
• Men are high status
• Women are seen as less appropriate for high status
positions
• Women are more suitable for support roles.
Glass ceiling
• When women violate stereotypec
expectancies, they are rejected.
• The glass ceiling is a barrier that prevents
women from reaching top positions.
• Men however get on the glass escalator
when they enter female occupations
• Women must overcome greater obstacles
than men to reach a similar level of
success.
Tokens
• Tokens make discrimination seem less plausible as an
explanation for other women’s lack of success
• Tokenism can be an effective strategy for deterring
collective protest by disadvantaged groups
• Tokenism have two negative effects
- It lets prejudiced people off the hook as the presence of
a token help maintain the perception that they are not
prejudiced
- It can damage self-esteem and confidence including to
the tokens.
Why do people form and use
stereotypes?
• Stereotypes function as schemas for organizing,
interpreting and recalling information
• Stereotypes act as theories, guiding and exerting strong
effects on how we process social information
• Once they are formed, they shape our perception so that
new information is interpreted as confirming our
stereotype. We place inconsistencies as ‘subtype’.
• Illusory correlation is the perception of a stronger
association between two variables than actually exists. It
helps explain why negative behaviours are often
attributed to members of minority groups.
• Majority groups tend to perceive out-group members as
‘all alike’ (out-group homogeneity) and their own group
members as more diverse (in-group differentiation)
• Stereotypes change as relations between the groups are
altered. Those in power are more likely to negatively
stereotype those of less status.
• Stereotypic judgment will be stable as long as the nature
of the inter-group relationship that exists between any
two groups is stable
• When values and categorization change, stakes in the
present status is altered.
Prejudice and discrimination
• Prejudice is an attitude, usually negative towards
members of a social group based on their membership
• It is dependent on the perceived norms and acceptability
of doing so
• Information that is consistent with prejudiced views often
received closer attention and is remembered more
• Prejudice may reflect more specific underlying emotional
responses to different out-groups including fear, guilt and
disgust.
• Discriminatory actions that follow maybe different
Threats to self-esteem
• Prejudice persist because disparaging
others can protect our self-esteem.
• Threats to our group’s interest can
motivate prejudice and competition can
escalate conflicts
• Holding prejudiced views of an out-group
allows members to bolster their own
group’s image.
Realistic conflict theory
• Prejudice stems from direct competition
between groups over scarce and valued
resources such as land, jobs, housing etc.
• As competition escalates, members of
opposing groups view each other in
increasingly negative terms.
• Competition can escalate into full-scale,
emotion-laden prejudice.
Social identity theory
• Prejudice is derived from our tendency to divide
world into ‘us’ and ‘them’. Categorization may be
based on race, religion, gender, age occupation.
• We view our group more favorably than other
out-groups. ‘them’ are assumed to possess
more undesirable traits.
• Part of people’s self-esteem depends on
identifying with their social group. Strong need to
enhance our self-esteem make us see others as
inferior.
Discrimination: prejudice in action
• Discrimination involves differential actions
towards other social groups
• Blatant forms of discrimination has decreased
because of the law or fear of retaliation.
• More subtle forms such as modern racism and
ambivalent racism persist.
• People with high modern racism may want to
hide their prejudice in public settings but express
them in private.
• Bona fide pipeline in based on the assumption
that people are unaware of their prejudices
Why prejudice is not inevitable:
Techniques for countering its effects
• Group norms and socialization help to
perpetuate prejudice.
• When people are exposed to derogatory ethnic
labels, they can effect responses to the slurred
target differently depending on their level of
racism.
• Exposure to derogatory ethnic labels can elicit
conformity pressures with people wanting to fit-
in.
• Prejudice appears to be common. However, it
can be reduced.
Learning not to hate
• Children acquire negative attitudes
because they hear such views expressed
by significant others.
• Children need to be taught early to reduce
prejudice.
• People whi come face to face with their
own prejudices and are willing to modify
their behaviour will lower levels of
prejudice in their children
The potential benefits of contact
• The contact hypothesis involves bringing
previously segregated groups into contact.
• Increased contact can lead to growing
recognition of similarities.
• Positive contact that reflect cooperation
and interdependence can change norms
so that group equality is favoured.
Recategorization: changing
boundries
• Prejudice can be reduced by shifting the
boundary between ‘us’ and ‘them’.
• People formerly viewed as out group may now
be viewed more positively.
• Increased positive contact between previously
separate groups reduces inter-group bias.
• Groups working together toward shared goals
perceive themselves as a single social entity.
Learn to ‘just say no’
• Emotional techniques for reducing prejudice are
effective. People with egalitarian standards feel
guilty when they violate those beliefs.
• They can reduce their automatic activation of
stereotypes to behave according to their
egalitarian principles.
• People can reduce their reliance on stereotypes
by consciously saying ‘no’ to association
between stereotypes and specific social groups.
Social influence
• Social influence plays a role in both
maintenance and reduction of prejudice.
• Evidence suggesting that members of
their group hold less prejudiced views are
out of line with most people of their group,
they may change their views.

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen