Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2

19
Part 2

Transcript of Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2

Page 1: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2

Part 2

Page 2: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2

Implicit Association Test

https://implicit.harvard.edu/implicit/demo/selectatest.jsp

Page 3: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2

Tyrone Walker vs. Erik Walker Children and stereotyping

Page 4: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2

White television viewers who watch a stereotyped comic portrayal of Black people are later more likely to judge a Black defendant guilty of an assault

Males who view movie scenes objectifying women are later more likely to believe that a date rape victim experienced pleasure and “got what she wanted”

Page 5: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2

People who watch a music video objectifying women later rate a woman as more sexual and submissive when she returns a man’s advances

Page 6: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 7: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 8: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 9: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 10: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 11: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 12: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 13: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 14: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 15: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 16: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 17: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 18: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2
Page 19: Prejudice stereotyping&discriminationpart2