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• Create a list of labels that people place on you by looking at you (i.e. athlete/jock, nerd, etc) • Beside that list, write a list of labels that ppl could not see about you • What do these labels say about you? • Society & its institutions serve to ensure everyone’s rights are protected • Done in Canada through the Charter of Rights & Freedoms • Demands that everyone is treated equally regardless of individual differences or group affiliations • Does this always occur? • NO! • Despite the Charter & laws, discrimination of all types exist • Most discrimination begins with a stereotype • Stereotypes highlight a specific behaviour that is observed, often in a limited or infrequent form about a specific group • Stereotypes may seem harmless but they often turn into prejudices • Prejudice is not illegal but it is unethical • Bad b/c it often leads to exclusion or hostility making certain individuals/groups victims which leads to a loss in self-esteem • Prejudices lead to discrimination which is illegal Overt Discrimination Systemic Discrimination Intentional actions against an indy/group b/c of a characteristic they possess Subtle/unintentional acts against an indy/group where consequences/outcomes are not fully understood by those doing it • Discrimination: the act of treating groups or individuals unfairly based on race, gender, or other common characteristics • Stereotype: an exaggerated view judgment made about a group or class of ppl • Types of Discrimination • Racism: erroneous judgment, assumptions, opinions or actions towards a person/group, based on the belief that one race is superior to another • Sexism: attitudes or behaviours based on predetermined ideas of sexual roles • Classism: systemic or personal actions taken against a person/group according to their socio-economic level, which leads to human needs being unmet • Prejudice: an individual judgment about or active hostility towards another social group • Also – Ageism and Ableism – How do you think they discriminate? Crayola has had numerous discriminatory colour names over the years including FLESH which was later changed to peach in 1962 Why is this discriminatory? Similarly, Crayola also needed to change the name of its INDIAN RED crayon to Chestnut in 1999. Can you believe a company was still using a derogatory name like that a little over a decade ago! • In the face of discrimination it is important that everyone becomes an upstander • A person who takes action, particularly when the easiest or most acceptable course is to do nothing, when he or she believes something is right • Learned Theory • Actions, behaviours & beliefs are learned during the process of socialization • Often children take on the views of their parents (or other agents) & follow them blindly until their adolescent years (tend to abandon some ideas in search of our own identity) • Competition Theory • Actions, behaviours & beliefs are enacted due to fear of competition b/w a group that differs from your own • CAN is multicultural hwr, its policies (historically) are prejudice against visible minorities due to competition for land and/or economic profit • Frustration-Aggression Theory • Occurs when an individual feels frustrated & resents another group that they perceive to be in a better state (ie. Financially) than themselves • Frustration turns to aggression against “the others” who become scapegoats • Scapegoats are a specific group of ppl who become the target of hatred and/or blame for the situation of another group (usually the majority group) • Ignorance Theory • Occurs when an individual lacks personal or social experience w/ another group & causes them to make incorrect assumptions • Often these ppl refuse to learn about “others” & remain unaware of how/why the “others” function the way they do • It is the fear of unfamiliar cultural practices that guides discriminatory behaviour (ethnocentricism is often a culprit!)