Results 211 to 220 of about 12,011 (258)
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Ethnic hierarchies, ethnic prejudice, and social dominance orientation
Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 2005AbstractPrevious research in multi‐ethnic societies has shown that people rank, or form hierarchies of, the ethnic groups on the basis of social distance. Based on self‐report data from a community sample (N = 150 non‐psychology students), this study examined (1) the correspondence of ratings and rankings of six ethnic target groups among various ...
Bo Ekehammar
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Ethnic Prejudice and Discrimination in Europe
Journal of Social Issues, 2008This article provides an introduction to research on European prejudice and discrimination. First, we list the distinctive characteristics of a European perspective and provide a short sketch of European immigration and ethnic groups. Europe has become a multicultural community.
Andreas Zick +2 more
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POSITIVE PREJUDICE IN ETHNIC ATTITUDES: AUSTRALIAN DATA
International Journal of Psychology, 1985An experiment was conducted to determine whether members of a majority ethnic group would exhibit positive prejudice in their attitudes toward an ethnic minority. Subjects were given written communications which evaluated Aborigines and white Australians either favourably or unfavourably.
M P, O'driscoll, N T, Feather
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2009
Slaves are ubiquitous, yet nearly invisible: central to the functioning of the polis, but ‘outsiders’ to it as well. In this sense, there is something else that they symbolize: the relationship between the polis and other peoples and races. This relationship is often conceived in terms of actual or potential hostility.
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Slaves are ubiquitous, yet nearly invisible: central to the functioning of the polis, but ‘outsiders’ to it as well. In this sense, there is something else that they symbolize: the relationship between the polis and other peoples and races. This relationship is often conceived in terms of actual or potential hostility.
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Threat, Group Identification, and Children's Ethnic Prejudice
Social Development, 2005AbstractThis experiment tested predictions from social identity development theory (SIDT, Nesdale, 1999), that children's tendency to show out‐group prejudice depends on the strength of their in‐group identification and/or their perception of threat from the out‐group.
NESDALE D +3 more
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Ethnic Prejudice and Susceptibility to Persuasion
American Sociological Review, 1960Experimental subjects who saw the motion picture "Gentleman's Agreement" were more likely to show reductions in the expression of anti-Semitic sentiments than control subjects who did not see the film. Moreover, there was a reduced but still considerable carry-over effect with regard to anti-Negro prejudice.
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Emotional Prejudice and Ethnic Obligations
2017This chapter examines two underlying motives of ethnic violence: emotional prejudice and ethnic obligations. It first considers how instrumental interests motivate ethnic violence before discussing arguments against this notion. It then turns to emotional prejudice, a motive that seems the polar opposite of instrumental-rational action.
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Intercultural Effectiveness, Authoritarianism, and Ethnic Prejudice
Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 2011This study examined the extent to which intercultural effectiveness dimensions (cultural empathy, open‐mindedness, social initiative, emotional stability, flexibility) and right‐wing authoritarianism (RWA) predicted the ethnic prejudice of 166 Australian respondents toward Indigenous Australians.
Nesdale, Drew +2 more
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The Polls: Ethnic Social Distance and Prejudice
Public Opinion Quarterly, 1983(S)tereotypes are loaded with preference, suffused with affection or dislike, attached to fears, lusts, strong wishes, pride, hope. Whatever invokes the stereotype is judged with the appropriate sentiment. Except where we deliberately keep prejudice in suspense, we do not study a man and judge him to be bad. We see a bad man.
Tom W. Smith, Glenn R. Dempsey
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Language and the Development of Children’s Ethnic Prejudice
Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 2001This article considers whether the study of children’s language in intergroup contexts enhances our understanding of the development of children’s ethnic prejudice. It is concluded that whereas children’s ethnic preferences may be well established by 6 years of age, ethnic prejudice does not emerge in middle childhood.
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