prejudice discrimination
Overview
This lesson explores the complex phenomena of prejudice and discrimination, differentiating between attitudes and behaviors. We will investigate various theories explaining their origins and discuss the significant impacts they have on individuals and society. Understanding these concepts is crucial for analyzing social inequalities and promoting positive intergroup relations.
Defining Prejudice, Discrimination, and Stereotypes
It is crucial to distinguish between these three interconnected but distinct concepts. * **Prejudice** is primarily an **attitude**. It involves an affective (emotional) component, often negative feelings like hostility or contempt, and a cognitive component, which are beliefs (stereotypes). It'...
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Key Concepts
- Prejudice: A preconceived, usually negative, attitude or opinion about a person or group, often based on stereotypes, without sufficient reason or actual experience.
- Discrimination: Unfair treatment of a person or group based on their actual or perceived membership in a particular group, rather than on individual merit.
- Stereotype: A generalized and often oversimplified belief about a particular group of people, which may be positive, negative, or neutral, but often ignores individual differences.
- In-group: A social group to which a person psychologically identifies as being a member.
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Exam Tips
- →Clearly distinguish between prejudice (attitude), discrimination (behavior), and stereotypes (belief). Provide examples for each.
- →For each theory (Social Learning, RCT, SIT), be able to explain its core tenets, provide supporting evidence (e.g., Robbers Cave for RCT, Minimal Group for SIT), and discuss its strengths and weaknesses.
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