Results 211 to 220 of about 3,233 (249)
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Hostile Sexism, Racial Resentment, and Political Mobilization

Political Behavior, 2021
We argue that hostile sexism and racial resentment play an important and somewhat underappreciated role in American elections through their influence on voter turnout and engagement with political campaigns. The effects of these attitudes are not straightforward but depend on partisanship.
Kevin K. Banda, Erin C. Cassese
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The relation of climate change denial with benevolent and hostile sexism

Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 2022
AbstractEcofeminism purports that sexist ideology and climate change denial are related, as prejudice, and its desire for power and nonuniversalism, create a disregard for both. In three studies we examined the associations between hostile and benevolent sexism with climate change denial.
Adelheid A. M. Nicol   +2 more
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Benevolent and Hostile Sexism and preferences for romantic partners

Personality and Individual Differences, 2009
Abstract This research investigated the associations between sexist attitudes and preferences for romantic partners both cross-sectionally (N = 347 women, 130 men) and longitudinally over a nine-month period (N = 174 women). Women placed greater importance on status/resources partner characteristics, particularly when they were high in Benevolent ...
Lucy K. Travaglia   +2 more
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Hostile sexism is related to worse mental health outcomes among fathers

Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 2023
Transition to parenthood is a life-changing yet stressful event for both men and women. The present study aims to: (1) establish the incidence of prenatal paternal depression and anxiety in a sample of expectant fathers and (2) assess the relationship between sexist beliefs and mental health outcomes.We recruited expectant fathers (n = 100) who ...
İmran Gökçen Yılmaz-Karaman   +3 more
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Women's Benevolent Sexism as Reaction to Hostility

Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2006
Grounded in the theory of ambivalent sexism, this study tested the speculation that women's benevolent sexist attitudes may be, in part, a self-protective response to environments they perceive as hostile to women. Data that have indirectly supported this conjecture thus far have been correlational.
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Hostile sexism: Commentary on "The darkest of ages".

Peace and Conflict: Journal of Peace Psychology, 1999
In his analysis of the psychological underpinings of Taliban treatment of women, Schulz theorizes about its origins and motives. I carry this further by relating Taliban behavior to concepts of power and authoritarianism, and especially by differentiating hostile and benevolent sexism.
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Perceptions of the links between racism and sexism: Hostile and benevolent sexism

Group Processes & Intergroup Relations
People assume that those who hold sexist beliefs hold racist beliefs, and vice versa. However, past work only investigated hostile sexism, or blatantly negative evaluations of women. Hostile sexism is positively associated with benevolent sexism, or, more subjectively, positive attitudes that serve to keep women in restricted domestic roles. Across two
Jeanine M. Sempler, Megan K. McCarty
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How accurate are metaperceptions of sexism? Evidence for the illusion of antagonism between hostile and benevolent sexism

Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 2014
In the first examination of the accuracy of metaperceptions of sexism among White, Asian, and Black women and men ( N = 308), results showed that regardless of ethnicity, both genders were similarly inaccurate, but in opposing ways. Women overestimated men’s hostile sexism (HS) and underestimated men’s benevolent sexism (BS), whereas men overestimated ...
Laurie A. Rudman, Janell C. Fetterolf
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The social nature of benevolent sexism and the antisocial nature of hostile sexism: Is benevolent sexism more likely to manifest in public contexts and hostile sexism in private contexts?

International journal of psychology : Journal international de psychologie, 2016
Previous research converges on demonstrating that benevolent sexism (BS) is socially approved, whereas hostile sexism (HS) is socially disapproved. We postulated that a sample of married women would be likely to report that their husbands express hostile sexist attitudes and engage in related actions towards them more in private than public contexts ...
Tadios, Chisango   +2 more
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Ambivalent Sexism in Context: Hostile and Benevolent Sexism Moderate Bias Against Female Drivers

Basic and Applied Social Psychology, 2015
We investigated whether ambivalent sexism predicts bias against female drivers in a simulated civil trial paradigm. Participants were randomly assigned to read a vignette of an automobile accident involving a male or female defendant. In a driving context designed to incite feelings of competitiveness toward women (Study 1), hostile sexism predicted ...
Allison L. Skinner   +2 more
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