Results 211 to 220 of about 349,518 (266)
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Are the Aged a Minority Group?*

Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 1978
ABSTRACT: The aged resemble minority groups in three ways, i.e., they suffer from prejudice, discrimination, and deprivation. On the other hand, they are not born into their age group, and they have little sense of group identity or political unity.
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Minority Group Status and Fertility

American Journal of Sociology, 1969
Most studies of minority group fertility assume that as assimilation proceeds the fertility of minority and majority populations will coverge. Differences between minority and majority are usually treated as temporary phenomena and often are interpreted in terms of the social, demographic, and economic characteristics of minority group members ...
C, Goldscheider, P R, Uhlenberg
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Myths and Stereotypes in Minority Groups

International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 1984
Human groups display phenomena which seem unconsciously motivated and which are revealed in labels, stereotypes and modem myths. Such phenomena can be under stood through a methodology applied by both Freud in psychoanalysis, and modern structuralists in anthropology. The forces operating behind myths and stereotypes are opposites.
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Morale and Minority Groups

American Journal of Sociology, 1941
As a nation composed of many diverse racial and cultural elements, the United States faces a unique problem of building national morale. The Indian, the Negro, the Oriental, and particularly the European immigrants and their descendants constitute our principal minorities.
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Trust and Minority Groups

2017
In this chapter we consider the patterns of social and political trust on the basis of ethnoracial identification. Concerning social trust, the vast majority of individuals in ethnoracial minority groups trust less than majority group members. Although a large body of research attributes this to institutional rather than cultural effects, in practice ...
Rima Wilkes, Cary Wu
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Minority stress theory: Application, critique, and continued relevance

Current Opinion in Psychology, 2023
David M Frost, Ilan H Meyer
exaly  

The Scottish Minorities Group

2015
An organised homosexual rights group did not appear in Scotland until 1969, a decade after the Homosexual Law Reform Society (HLRS) began its work in England. The Minorities Research Group (MRG) followed the HLRS a few years later; across the Atlantic, North American activists had formed the Mattachine Society in 1951.1 In 1969 in Scotland, a group of ...
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