Chapter 9

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Chapter 9 Inequalities of Race and Ethnicity

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Chapter 9. Inequalities of Race and Ethnicity. Race: Myth and Reality. Myth 1 - Idea That Any Race is Superior All Races Have Geniuses and Idiots Genocide Still Around Myth 2 - Idea that Any Race is Pure Human Characteristics Flow Endlessly Together. The Significance of Race. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 9

Page 1: Chapter 9

Chapter 9

Inequalities of Race and Ethnicity

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Race: Myth and Reality

• Myth 1 - Idea That Any Race is Superior– All Races Have Geniuses and Idiots– Genocide Still Around

• Myth 2 - Idea that Any Race is Pure– Human Characteristics Flow Endlessly Together

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The Significance of Race

• Race - a category of people with inherited physical features that distinguish it from another category.– Both a myth and a reality

• Myth of race makes a difference for social life.

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Race and Ethnicity

• Racism connects biological differences with judgment of innate superiority or inferiority.

• Ethnicity and ethnic – refer to cultural characteristics that distinguish people.

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Definition of a Minority• A minority refers to a relatively small number of

people.

• Refined the definition to specify:– a group of people who are physically or culturally

singled out from others for unequal treatment &– who regard themselves as objects of collective

discrimination.

• Not necessarily a numerical minority

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The Significance of Ethnicity

• Ethnic minority – socially identified by its unique characteristics related to culture or nationality.

– Cultural differences define ethnic minorities.

– Because of their differences from the host culture, ethnic minorities are subcultures.

– Ethnic minorities have a way of life that is based on their own language, religion, values, beliefs, norms, and customs.

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Minority and Dominant Groups• Dominant Group - Group with Most…

– Power– Privileges– Highest Social Status

• Dominant Group Does the Discriminating

• Minority Groups Occur Because of…– Expansion of Political Boundaries

– Migration

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Patterns of Racial and Ethnic Relations

• When different racial and ethnic groups interact there are two major types of outcomes:– pattern of assimilation- groups become cultural

and socially fused• assimilation, multiculturalism

– pattern of conflict• genocide, population transfer, internal

colonialism, segregation

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Patterns of Racial and Ethnic Relations

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Theories of Prejudice and Discrimination

• Prejudice – is prejudging in some way, usually negative; an overgeneralization based on biased or insufficient information; attitude/belief.– Internalizing Dominant Norms

• Lighter/Darker Skin• Ethnic Maps

• Discrimination – unequal treatment of people based on their minority membership.– Discrimination is action

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A Sense of Ethnicity

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Theories of Prejudice and Discrimination

• Stereotype – a set of ideas based on distortion, exaggeration, and oversimplification that is applied to all members of a social category.

• Hate Crime – a criminal act motivated by prejudice (related to race, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, or ancestry).

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Institutionalized Discrimination• Institutionalized discrimination – negative treatment

of a minority group that is built into society’s institutions.– the result of unfair practices that are part of the structure of

society and have grown out of traditionally accepted behaviors.

• American history reflects the open and legal practice of discrimination against members of various minorities (e.g., internment of Japanese Americans during WWII).

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Direct and Indirect Institutionalized Discrimination

• Direct institutionalized discrimination – refers to organizational or community actions intended to deprive a racial or ethnic minority of its rights (e.g., Jim Crow laws)

• Indirect institutionalized discrimination – refers to unintentional behavior that negatively affects a minority (e.g., high school exit exams).

• Color-blind Racism- Edward Bonilla Silva

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Institutional Discrimination• Health CareRace – Ethnicity and Mother/Child Deaths

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Institutional Discrimination• Home Mortgages and Car LoansBuying a House: Institutional Discrimination in Mortgages

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Functionalist Perspective

• Functionalists have focused on the functions and dysfunctions of prejudice and discrimination– Functions: in-group solidarity and out-group

antagonism– Dysfunctions: negative; destroys human relationships;

social, political, educational, and economic costs of the exploitation and oppression of minorities are extremely high.

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Conflict Perspective

• According to conflict perspective, a majority uses its prejudice and discrimination as weapons of power in the domination of a minority.

• Ruling class systematically pits group against group.– Solidarity among groups weakens = they benefit– Keep Workers Insecure– Exploit Racial-Ethnic Divisions

– Ex. Black / Latino conflict

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Symbolic Interactionist Perspective• Prejudice and discrimination are acquired through

socialization.

• The labels we learn color our perceptions – leading to selective perception (labels create prejudice)– We see certain things and are blind to others

• We learn our prejudices in interaction with others.

• Self-fulfilling prophecy – Stereotypical behavior in those who are stereotyped– Ex. Asians’ pressure to succeed

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Theoretical Perspectives: Prejudice and Discrimination

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African Americans• Face a legacy of discrimination.

• African Americans make up second largest minority group.

• Gap between African Americans and whites in education, income, and employment represents the legacy of centuries of prejudice and discrimination.

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U.S. Population by Racial and Ethnic Group, 2008

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Socioeconomic Characteristics of African Americans

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Gender Differences for African Americans

• African American females with college degrees earn substantially more than the median for all African American men.

• African American college-educated women earn as much as white women with college degrees.

• 1/3 of African American women enter college and 1/4 of African American men enter college.

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“Two Black Americas”

• According to Richard Freeman, a black elite has been emerging in America,

• As opposed to a black underclass composed of the permanently poor trapped in inner-city ghettos.

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“Two Black Americas”• Some theorists, such as

William Julius Wilson, discuss the declining significance of race for African Americans.

• The premise is that race is less important than resources in determining life chances or economic class.

• Ex. Discrimination in Apartment Rentals

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Latinos• May be black, white, or Native American• Latinos make up largest minority group• Just under 2/3 of Latinos are of Mexican descent. About 1/10

are Puerto Ricans. Cubans are the third most populous category of Latinos.

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Socioeconomic & Educational Status of Latinos• 62% of Latinos (age 25+) have completed high school.

– Mexican Americans have the lowest levels of educational achievement, and Cubans the highest.

• Average income is higher than African Americans, but lower than whites.– Puerto Ricans are the poorest among Latino groups and Cubans are

the most affluent.

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Native Americans• Divided into approximately 500 tribes and bands.

• Tribal groups are as different from one another as from the dominant culture.

• Number between 2 million – 4.5 million.

• Median income is less than $35,000/year

• 14% of Native Americans 25 years or older had completed four years or more of college.

• Currently no Native American members of the U.S. Senate and two in the House of Representatives.

• Invisible minority

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Asian Americans• Nearly 15 million Asians live in the United States.

• Largest groups are from China, the Philippines, Japan, India, Korea, and Vietnam.

• Chinese Exclusion Act (1882) suspended all Chinese immigration for 10 years; Strict federal legislation continued to be passed until after 1940.

• 1942 led to internment of Japanese in America (2/3 were American citizens).

• Asian Americans have been particularly successful at using the education system for upward mobility.• Almost 50% of Asian Americans have completed 4 years of college.

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White Ethnics

• WASPS – very ethnocentric and racist

• White ethnics are immigrants or descendants of immigrants from eastern and southern European nations.

• White ethnics, when compared to WASPs, were more likely to be sympathetic to government help for the poor and were more in favor of integration.

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Middle Easterners• Arabs are people from the Middle East (Pakistan,

Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Turkey, the Arabian peninsula) and Arab North Africa.

• Muslims are followers of Islam; Not all Arabs are Muslims and not all Muslims are Arabs.

• Immigrant population: 200,000 in 1970 to 1.5 million today.

• ½ of all Middle Easterners have graduated from college; 20% with post-graduate degrees.

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What are the consequences of increased immigration?

Positive• helps employers because

immigrants will often do work avoided by the native population, and they will work longer for less pay

• immigrants can promote increased tolerance and understanding of diversity

• educated immigrants provide a talent pool benefiting their new country

Negative• employers exploit immigrants

because they work more cheaply at unpleasant jobs

• the poorer countries from which many immigrants come experience a talent pool drain

• immigration may bring increased criminal activity

• immigrant minorities• can create conflict within a

society

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Dual Labor Market Theory• The dual labor market theory - the existence of a

split between core and peripheral segments of the economy and the division of the labor force into preferred and marginalized workers.

• Rewards for hard work, education, and training vary.– Workers in the core sector enjoy high wages,

opportunities for advancement, and job security. – Those in the peripheral sector are employed in low-

paying jobs with little hope for advancement.

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Global and U.S. Ethnic Diversity

• Normally, immigration is from developing countries to more developed countries, with people seeking better jobs, wages, and living conditions.– push and pull factors

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Looking Towards the Future

• The Immigration Debate

• Affirmative Action

• Towards a True Multicultural Society

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Projections of the Racial–Ethnic Makeup of the US Population

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Race – Ethnicity and Comparative Well-Being

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Race – Ethnicity and Education