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Diversity in the United States: Questions and Concepts Chapter One Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Racial and Ethnic Groups 1980-2050 Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. A Land of Immigrants • Over the past three decades, the number of immigrants arriving in the U.S. has more than tripled, changing the racial and ethnic makeup of U.S. society Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. What is a minority group? • • The members of the group experience a pattern of disadvantage or inequality. The members of the group share a visible trait or characteristic that differentiates them from other groups. • The minority group is a self-conscious social unit. • Membership in the group is usually determined at birth. • Members tend to marry within the group. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Inequality • • • • Most important defining characteristic of minority groups Variable patterns of inequality-exploitation, slavery, genocide Minority, or subordinate groups, have less of what society values Pattern is a result of actions by the core or dominant group Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Inequality • • • Stratification, or the unequal distribution of valued goods and services, is a basic feature of society. Societies are divided into horizontal layers (or strata), often called social classes, which differ from one another by the amount of resources they command. Minority group status affects access to property, prestige, and power Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. White and Black Americans on Equal Opportunity 1963-2009 Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Theoretical Perspectives Theories of Inequality Karl Marx Class Conflict inevitable Max Weber Gerhard Lenski Patricia Hill Collins Relationship to the means of production Economic Position Level of development of society Matrix of domination Borgeoisie or the ruling class Prestige Subsistence technology Intersecting and mutually reinforcing inequalities The proletariat or the working class Power Oppressor and oppressed changes based on changes in social context Can oppress and be oppressed simultaneously s Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Minority Group Status and Stratification • • • Minority group status affects access to wealth and income, prestige, and power. Although social classes and minority groups are correlated, they are separate social realities. Struggles over property, wealth, prestige, and power lie at the heart of every dominant-minority relationship. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Visible Distinguishing Traits • • Visible traits or characteristics that set members of the group apart and that the dominant group holds in low esteem. Racial minority groups differentiated by physical characteristics. • Ethnic minority groups differentiated by cultural characteristics. • Categories can overlap. • Creations of historical and social processes not biological Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Race • Even though race is not regarded as an important biological characteristic, it is still an important social concept. It continues to be seen as a significant way of differentiating among people. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Distribution of Skin Color Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Race and Western Traditions • The U.S. concept of race has its origins in Western Europe. Developed after European exploration led to contact with Africans, Asians, and Native Americans. • • • Europeans conquered, colonized, and sometimes destroyed those people they came into contact with. This was facilitated and contributed to their linking of differences between what would come to be seen as races with notions of inferiority and superiority. These notions continue to have significance today. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Race and Biology • Attempts were made to develop systems of scientifically-based racial classifications. These were limited because dividing lines between the so-called racial groups are arbitrary and blurred. • Recent scientific developments show that genetic variation within the “traditional” racial groups is greater than the variation between those groups. These developments show that the traditional American perception of race based primarily on skin color, has no scientific validity. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. The Social Construction of Race • • To sociologists, race is a social construction and its meaning has been created and sustained not by science but by historical, social, economic, and political processes. The importance of race was socially constructed as the result of particular historical conflicts and it remains important not because of objective realities but because of the widespread, shared social perception that it is important. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Gender • • • Like race, gender has both a biological and a social component and can be a highly visible and convenient way of judging and sorting people. Rather than discussing women as a separate group, we need to focus on the divergent experiences of men and women within each minority group. This approach permits us to analyze the ways in which race, ethnicity, gender, and class combine, overlap, and crosscut each other to form a “matrix of domination” (Hill-Collins, 1991, pp. 225-227). Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Social Construction of Gender • • Traits commonly seen as “typical” of men or women are not discrete, separate categories As with racial differences, research has shown that there is more variation within gender categories than between them. These findings seriously undermine the view that gender differences are genetic or biological. • • The social construction is further illustrated by the fact that what is thought to be “appropriate” gender behavior varies from time to time and society to society. The essentially social nature of gender roles is further illustrated by the relationship between subsistence technology and gender inequality. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Gender Development Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Prejudice • • • The tendency to think (cognitive) about other groups in a particular manner and to attach usually negative emotions (affective) to other groups. Stereotypes are generalizations that are thought to apply to all members of the group. Generally the two dimensions of prejudice are highly correlated but distinct and separate and can vary independently. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Dominant-Minority Relations Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Causes of Prejudice • • • Theories that focus on personality needs as a cause of prejudice Theories that view prejudice as primarily a result of being raised in a racist society and interacting in many social situations in which discrimination is approved Theories that view prejudice as arising out of intergroup conflict Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Competition Between Groups and the Origins of Prejudice • • The one common factor that seems to account for the origin of all prejudices is competition between groups Typically, prejudice is more a result of the competition than a cause Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Limitations • • • Individuals who have no material stake in minority group subordination can still be extremely prejudiced. The sources of prejudice can be found in culture, socialization, family structure, and personality development, as well as in politics and economics. Prejudice can have important psychological and social functions independent of group power relationships. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Culture, Socialization, and the Persistence of Prejudice • • Prejudice originates in group competition of some sort but often outlives the conditions of its creation Gunnar Myrdal proposed the idea that prejudice is perpetuated through time by a self-fulfilling prophecy or a vicious cycle Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. The Vicious Cycle Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. The Vicious Cycle • • • The idea that prejudice is learned during socialization is reinforced by studies of the development of prejudice in children. Children acquire prejudice even when parents and other caregivers do not teach it overtly. Black / white doll test Ex: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkpUyB2xgTM Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. The Vicious Cycle • • Research using social distance scales demonstrates that prejudice exists apart from individuals and that it is passed from generation to generation. The importance of the social situation in which attitudes are expressed and behavior occurs is also important as what people think and what they do is not always the same. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Limitations • • • No two people have the same socialization experiences or develop exactly the same prejudices. Socialization is not a passive process; we are not neutral recipients of a culture that is simply forced down our throats. We also learn egalitarian norms and values as we are socialized. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Modern Racism • The harsh, blatant forms of prejudice present for most of U.S. history have become muted recently This led some to conclude that individual prejudice is no longer a significant problem in American life. • However, sociological research clearly demonstrates that prejudice has not disappeared. Rather, it has assumed a more subtle and indirect form. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. The Sociology of Individual Prejudice • • Prejudice has its origins in intergroup competition and is more the result of competition rather than the cause. Prejudice is used to justify and rationalize societal inequality that becomes part of a cultural heritage. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Discrimination • • Refers to behavior and may be defined as the unequal treatment of a person or persons based on group membership Discrimination and prejudice do not necessarily occur together Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Ideological Racism • • • • A belief system or a set of ideas that assert that a particular group is inferior and used to legitimize or rationalize the inferior status of the group. Incorporated into the culture of society and can be passed on from generation to generation. Do not necessarily need prejudice to have ideological racism-socialization processes. The term ideological sexism, analogous to ideological racism but focused on sexual differences, will be used when we analyze patterns of inequality between males and females. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Institutionalized Discrimination • • Patterns of unequal treatment based on group membership and built into the institutions and daily operations of society. Can be obvious and overt, but usually operate in more hidden and unintended ways. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. Institutionalized Discrimination • • Individual level prejudice and discrimination, and group level racism and institutional discrimination reinforce each other. These relationships are socially negotiated and sustain the respective positions of dominant and minority groups in the stratification system. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. A Global Perspective • • • It is important to note that the dynamics of intergroup relations in the United States are not unique. Group relations in the U.S. are shaped by global economic, social, and political forces. There are complex interconnections between the domestic and the international. Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e © 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.