Lecture 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Article: Flattering to Deceive: Why People Misunderstand Benevolent Sexism.

A

Benevolent sexism is recalled more often than hostile sexism. But protested less often because it is seen as warm. The warm affective tone of benevolent sexism masks ideological functions.

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2
Q

Benevolent sexism vs aggressive sexism

A

With aggressive sexism men say things to undermine women and they underestimate women.

Benevolent sexism manifests in a behaviour that seems very nice and friendly and less aggressive but if you think about it, it stems from the same cause. It is not necessary to have a negative intention.

  • E.g., “This part of the work is not for women because we want to protect you, it’s too dangerous for women” or “Let me carry your bag”.
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3
Q

Article: The “Equal-Opportunity Jerk” Defense: Rudeness Can Obfuscate Gender Bias

A

If someone is rude to women and they are called out as sexist, but they say they are also rude to men, this is no longer seen as sexism.

So, rudeness to men can make somebody look less sexist and discriminatory.

Just by showing rudeness to everyone, doesn’t mean that that person doesn’t have a gender bias or can still have certain implicit stereotypes of women.

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4
Q

Parastronaut project

A

It is about commitment to enhance inclusiveness and fair representation

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5
Q

Article: Difference Matters: Teaching Students a Contextual Theory of Difference Can Help Them Succeed

A

Interventions that teach students about the contextual nature of differences between social groups can improve all students’ intergroup skills and even their academic performance.

Differences are not inherent but can be influenced by context, e.g., by norm.

Inclusion of ethnic studies and diversity courses in curricula has led to increased attendance, grade point averages, and credits earned among disadvantaged students.

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6
Q

Contemporary inequality

A

The post-industrial class structure based on four types of capital.

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7
Q

What are the four resources of contemporary inequality?

A

The four resources; things that can cause inequality:

  1. Economical capital – income
  2. Social capital – who you know
  3. Cultural capital – where you fit in
  4. Personal capital – who you are
    o Good health and attractiveness are positive
    o Attractiveness is relative, every culture has a different form of beauty
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8
Q

Diversity

A

Diversity is a fact of life; just look around you. Differences in personality can be categorized as diversity. Everything can be called diversity, it is part of life, we can’t eliminate it.

Diversity is diverse; look beyond the usual suspects.

All processes have their initial difficulties; we have to work through them to obtain the benefits.

On one hand we humans are expected to cooperate, to work together towards a certain common goal so that we can all survive and achieve our goal together. But on the other hand we also have diversity of people with different characteristics and different ideas with different principles or perspectives. The challenge is how to make sure that we can still achieve the goals but at the same time manage this diversity and ensure that the diversity is going to help us achieve that goal instead of hindering the progression/achievement of the goal.

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9
Q

What are the challenges associated with managing diversity?

A
  • Conflict
  • Lack of effort to promote inclusion and to manage diversity in a positive way
  • Resistance towards efforts to promote diversity
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10
Q

The categorization-elaboration model (CEM) (Van Knippenberg et al., 2004)

A

Research in managing work-group diversity and performance has two main traditions that use distinct perspectives that generate different predictions regarding performance outcomes.

Elaboration of task-relevant information & perspectives = because there is diversity there will be more motivation to talk about different perspectives

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11
Q

What are the perspectives of the CEM?

A
  1. Social categorization perspective
    o As humans we tend to categorize people into certain groups, we see ourselves as an ingroup of something and others as an outgroup.
    o This categorization may lead to conflict because the categorization makes people less united.
    o Homogeneous groups will perform better than heterogeneous groups because of higher commitment and less conflict.
    o The focus of this perspective is on the relational aspects of group processes.
    o Diversity will not lead to better outcomes.
  2. Information/decision making perspective
    o Diversity can lead to positive outcomes such as innovations and creativity. This is because when you have a group consisting of diverse people, these people might have different perspectives, ideas, knowledge and experiences that can increase the quality of the discussion. It will create the quality of the ideas.
    o Diverse groups should outperform homogenous groups because of their better range of task-relevant knowledge, skills, and ability.
    o The focus of this perspective is on task-related aspects of group processes.
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12
Q

Contact hypothesis (Allport)

A

If you want people to like each other you have to make sure that they are familiar with each other. You can make people more familiar with each other through contact.

The source of negative attitudes and intergroup conflict lies in unfamiliarity = intergroup anxiety.

Not every contact will work, only contact under the right circumstances is a solution.

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13
Q

Intergroup anxiety

A

You don’t know the other group which can make you feel anxious, not knowing how to act, whether or not to talk to them.

Intergroup anxiety may lead to conflict. You might feel threatened by the presence of the group.

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14
Q

Contact in organizations (Kulik & Roberson)

A

Contact can be very effective in meeting diversity targets

  • Informal contact (e.g., coffee break)
  • Formal contact (e.g., diversity initiatives that aims to directly increase contact)
  • Direct effect (e.g., let’s get to know each other)
  • Indirect effect (e.g., department outings where you hope people will understand that they will have to make contact)
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15
Q

Facilitating conditions that make contact work

A
  • Equal group status
  • There should be a common goal
  • Intergroup cooperation
  • Authority support
  • Acquaintance potential

Also facilitating: treated as member of the group rather than individuals (i.e., common ingroup)

  • You should treat everybody like they are a member of the same group
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16
Q

Equal group status as a facilitating conditions that makes contact work

A

If one group feels like the other group is too dominant it’s not going to work because they’ll feel threatened

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17
Q

Intergroup cooperation as a facilitating condition that makes contact work

A

Even though they come from different groups, if you give them a common goal and a common task they will have to work together.

Robber’s cave research, Sheriff: competitive games in two groups during a summer camp => conflict. And then, they are given tasks promoting cooperation (lunch task) => decreases tension and increases contact.

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18
Q

Examples of authority support as a facilitating condition that makes contact work

A
  • E.g., in organizations they provide coffee in the hope that you meet colleagues and make contact so that you can work together more effectively.
  • E.g., organize events that can allow people to have contact with each other.
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19
Q

Examples of acquaintance potential as a facilitating conditions that makes contact work

A
  • E.g., if you want more cooperation you need to have potential to be more than just stranger
  • E.g., in the supermarket there is no intention to be acquaintances with each other
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20
Q

How does contact improve attitudes?

A
  1. Learning about the outgroup
  2. Behavioural change
  3. Developing affective ties
  4. Ingroup re-appraisal
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21
Q

When does learning about the outgroup improve attitudes?

A

Only change in perceptions when:

  • Behaviour inconsistent with stereotype
  • Frequent and in several situations
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22
Q

How does behavioural contact improve attitudes?

A

Repeated behaviour leads to attitudes

Reoccurrence leads to liking if attitudes are positive, if negative than it leads to more conflict

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23
Q

How does developing affective ties improve attitude?

A
  • Positive emotions; prejudice comes from an absence of pos. emotion
  • Self-disclosure
  • Empathy
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24
Q

How does ingroup re-appraisal work with improving attitudes?

A

Changing perspective on ingroup and outgroup together

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25
Q

Article: Does contact at work extend its influence beyond prejudice? Evidence from healthcare settings

A

“These novel findings showed that frequent and positive contact with non-native individuals can improve health and organizational outcomes along with facilitating positive intergroup relations. “

So, yes!

But there are also other studies that don’t support contact leading to positive attitudes.

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26
Q

How can we have more contact if the immigration policies that try to make society more diverse are restricted. What is a strong argument against such policies?

A

That we need people to have more contact with each other to reduce conflict and improve positive attitudes.

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27
Q

What are the proposed mechanisms in the Article: Making Advantaged Racial Groups Care About Inequality: Intergroup Contact as a Route to Psychological Investment

A
  • Building empathy
  • Enhancing personal relevance
  • Humanizing other people
28
Q

What are the remaining questions with regards to the effects of contact?

A

Can the effects be generalized

  • To other situations with the same individuals?
  • To other individuals of the same group?
  • To other groups (deprovincialization of attitudes)?

Will contact always work across situations and across individuals? This is something that needs to be investigated further.

29
Q

Does contact always work?

A

Contact might have positive outcomes, but it doesn’t always work. If you believe that diversity is about a diverse population with diverse individuals and diverse characteristics, that means that there are always going to be situations where contact might not lead to positive outcomes.

30
Q

What are the limitations of the contact hypothesis?

A

It assumes that prejudice is mainly a result of unfamiliarity with the group. But is it?

  • Because if that is the case, the prejudice against African Americans wouldn’t be there. Because in America there is a diverse population and people get in contact with African Americans.

Other intergroup processes still remain.

31
Q

What are the possible solutions that we can pick from to address diversity related issues from the perspective of categorization?

A
  1. Decategorization
  2. Recategorization
  3. Mutual differentiation
  4. Dual identity
  5. Cross-categorization
32
Q

Decategorization

A

Getting rid of categories altogether

Decategorization solutions see the cause of intergroup conflict as the salience of ingroup-outgroup distinction.

Strong salience of ingroup-outgroup distinction leads to de-individuation.

If we want conflict to be prevented or reduced, we have to decategorize people.

Decategorization: promote individuation by making ingroup outgroup categories less salient/less powerful.

33
Q

What is the process of individuation?

A

Disconfirms stereotypes

  • “You are actually similar to me”

Reduces perception of group based on homogeneity

  • Even though a person is part of group they are not going to necessarily think the same way as the group

Individual information replaces category information

  • You emphasize the individual characteristics more than the characteristics of the category
34
Q

What are research examples of decategorization?

A
  • Experimental interactions => reduces prejudice
  • Diverse friendships (Pettigrew; Van Laar et al.)
    o If you have friends from diverse groups you tend to see them as people and not as people from certain groups
  • Knowledge of diverse friendships (Extended Contact Hypothesis; Pettigrew)
    o If you know two people from the same group but you see that they behave differently you realize not everyone from the same group behaves the same
35
Q

Recategorization

A

Emphasizing the common ingroup or subordinate category. So people can have different groups, but you put one big group, the common ingroup, above these other groups.

36
Q

What is the process by which recategorization works?

A
  • Perception of one group
  • Process: more positive evaluations of former outgroup members
  • Less intergroup anxiety
37
Q

What are research examples of recategorization?

A
  • Robber’s Cave research (Sheriff)
  • Company mergers
  • Calls for “Dutch” identity
  • Aversive racism and the Common Ingroup Identity Model (Gaertner & Dovidio)
38
Q

What are the problems with decategorization and recategorization

A

Decategorization into individual identities and recategorization into superordinate categories can be unstable solutions.

It is almost impossible to remove peoples identification with a certain group. People have ties to existing groups.

It’s not really ethical to remove someone from a group or to suddenly see them as part of a different group because they have ties with their (former) group.

People need groups:

  • People have a need for belonging and a need for positive distinctiveness.
  • Removing groups threatens social identity.
  • Problem optimal distinctiveness (Brewer)

People have ties to existing groups

  • History/conflicts
  • Meaningfulness

If we want a more sustainable solution, we have to work with groups and social identities.

39
Q

What are the three potential solutions that work with groups and social identities?

A
  • Mutual differentiation
  • Cross-categorization
  • Dual identity
40
Q

Mutual differentiation

A

Different but complementary roles.

Positive distinctiveness and cooperation.

  • In every company we have different departments, every department has different identities and different roles, but that is okay because they complete and help each other. The point is to not remove the groups but to emphasize what the group specializes in and is good at. It should be emphasized that the groups complement each other.

Disadvantages: salience, anxiety/conflict .

  • When the group is very salient and there is anxiety and conflict, it is not going to work. But you can say that you are different from that group but that you are better somewhere else, but it is hard when there is already conflict.
41
Q

Cross-categorization

A

Cross functional and nonfunctional categories, reduced correlation (e.g., female programmer, male secretary).

  • This is why there are certain jobs that are associated with masculinity, such as being an engineer. When a woman is already an engineer this can help because that is cross functional. It’s possible that even though these groups are different you can move into each other’s groups without barriers.

Increased complexity, reduced salience, preserved meaning.

  • E.g., not only women take care of children but there are also men that take care of the children, this makes gender roles more complex. Because of this the easy categorization could be challenged by the complexity.
42
Q

Dual identity

A

Identification with subgroup and superordinate group (cf. acculturation, Berry).

  • You shouldn’t just focus on superordinate groups, you can focus on both to create a strong connection between someone and both groups
43
Q

Color-blind vs. group-conscious

A

A group-conscious approach is an affirmative action, whereas color-blind means that everything should be based on merit and everyone is the same, people don’t have different experiences.

44
Q

Color-blind

A

Sounds great because you remove all the experiences and say that everyone is the same, but is it actually true?

Colorblindness does not mean that everyone is treated fairly and that people are only evaluated on acceptable characteristics. This is partly because everyone has a different starting point and because of historical discrimination and prejudice against certain groups. But also because there are hidden criteria and explicit criteria. These hidden criteria might unconsciously be biased. You also ignore challenges that each group needs to face.

45
Q

The advantages of the color-blind perspective

A

Diminishes open conflict

  • Because everyone thinks that it is fair even though it is not

Minimizes discomfort

  • Because everyone thinks they are being evaluated on the same basis
46
Q

The disadvantages of the color-blind perspective

A
  • Assumes equal starting position
  • Assumes unequal treatment does not happen anymore
  • Ignores importance of privilege
  • Ignores ethnic/socio-economic/gender differences
  • Fails to capitalize on advantages of diversity
47
Q

Article: Do Color Blindness and Multiculturalism Remedy or Foster Discrimination and Racism?

A

No, color blindness is not a remedy for discrimination, but multiculturalism can be.

48
Q

Group-conscious approach

A

Differences between people are real, substantial and consequential.

Pluralistic/multicultural approach.

Acknowledge and value differences.

49
Q

Affirmative action

A

Affirmative action is taking active steps to enhance equal opportunity. It really takes group needs and group experiences into account.

This is done because with affirmative action we acknowledge different challenges but also different social networks.

Extra measures are sometimes necessary.

50
Q

Affirmative action approaches

A

Really ‘active action’

  • It cannot be passive, organizations have to consciously do it and have policies for it.

The goal is elimination of unequal treatment.

It focuses on macro-justice over micro-justice .

Preferential policy can be part of affirmative action, but affirmative action can be broader than that.

It is affirmative action if there is an active action taken to help people who have been marginalized or minoritized.

51
Q

Why can extra measures be necessary sometimes? (affirmative action)

A
  • Because it is difficult to avoid stereotypes
  • To reach different social networks
    o E.g., people from marginalized groups have smaller social networks, they therefore need affirmative help and actions to get to the same starting point
  • To counteract ambivalence
  • Because similar procedures have different effects
52
Q

Preferential policy

A

Special education/training of underrepresented groups.

Preference for underrepresented candidates.

Use of quotas: target figures for specific groups.

  • In some countries they have quotas in the parliament for women for example to motivate the parties to recruit women.
53
Q

Legal boundaries of preferential policy in the Netherlands

A
  • Constitution (grondwet)
  • Statue book of criminal law (Wetboek van Strafrecht)
  • General Law Equal Treatment (Algemene Wet Gelijke Behandeling)
54
Q

When are exceptions on the legal boundaries of preferential policy permitted?

A
  • Demonstrated lower outcomes of group
  • Chosen method in proportion to disadvantage
  • Used only until disadvantage is removed
    o Meaning that it cannot be done forever
    o When and how do you measure disadvantage?
55
Q

Preferential policies from mild to extensive

A
  • Education/training of underrepresented groups.
  • Preference for underrepresented candidates.
  • Use of quota: target figures for specific groups.
56
Q

Education/training of underrepresented groups

A
  • Internal education/training
  • Access to study/training facilities
  • Reserving training places for underrepresented groups
57
Q

Preference for underrepresented candidates

A
  • Preference at equal aptitude
    o This means they need to have good skills that are required for the job
  • Preference at sufficient aptitude
    o They have sufficient skills that are required to do the job well
  • (Preference irrespective of aptitude) ILLEGAL
    o You cannot prefer a person on the basis of their group, regardless of their skills.
    o This means that organizations are only allowed to provide preferential treatment if they can also accompany that with a clear criterion regarding the performance or the skills or the potential of the person.
    o You have to be able to back your decision up with an explanation of why the person has sufficient or good aptitude required for the job.
58
Q

Use of quota: target figures for specific groups

A
  • This can be seen as an objective way of showing that there is more diversity and a clear objective target.
  • This is to stop people from having only one black person in the organization. It is to quantify diversity and to make the standard more objective.
59
Q

A news article from the NRC on how to find a female car salesperson

A

They turned to logo of Opel upside down, which then spells ‘Jade’. When it is Opel 76 males and 8 females applied, when they made it Jade 16 males and 41 females applied.

So even a name is associated with a certain gender, and tweaking that name can have a powerful effect.

60
Q

What do you pay attention to with equal aptitude?

A
  • Pay attention to
    o Stereotypes
    o Expectancies
    o Non-verbal behaviour
  • When you use these criteria you also have to think about how these criteria might affect certain groups.
61
Q

Obstacles to preferential policy in practice

A

Aptitude: which selection criteria to use?

  • Distinction between actual vs. hidden criteria
  • You should only use actual criteria
62
Q

Justifications organizations give for affirmative action

A
  1. Moral reasons
  2. Societal reasons
    o It can address societal problems
  3. Compliance
  4. Synergetic reasons
  5. Business-economic reasons
63
Q

Consequences of affirmative action for target and organization

A

Consequences can be positive or negative for target and/or organization.

Affirmative action is good but can easily been seen as something negative, not only by other people but also by people that got into the program. Minorities might wonder if they only got selected because they are a minority and majorities might see the minorities as only being selected because they are a minority.

64
Q

What do the consequences of affirmative action depend on?

A
  • Structure and information about affirmative action
  • Characteristics of the target group
  • Characteristics of the perceiver
    o Self-interest
    o Experiences with discrimination
    o Prejudice
65
Q

What are the positive effects of affirmative action?

A

Improved position of underrepresented groups

  • Sometimes small and inconsistent across groups

No negative impact on motivation, interest and satisfaction of target

  • Sometimes negative impact because of difficult tasks (target doubts their abilities)

No negative impact on effectiveness/financial success of organizations

  • Exposed discrimination reduces value shares
  • Success of diversity has shown an increase in value shares
66
Q

What are the potential negative effects of affirmative action?

A

Affirmative action employee is sometimes perceived as less competent by self and others:

  • If insufficient information about program and target
    o Information about why this person is chosen, thus also bout the criteria
  • In case of a strong preference, and if perceived to be appointed regardless of aptitude but on identity

Process:

  • Self-fulfilling prophecies
  • Role of triple jeopardy
  • Stereotype threat
67
Q

What are the important components for the success of affirmative action programs?

A

Emphasize macro-justice over micro-justice!

Before implementation of program:

  • Make criteria and process explicit and public
  • Record decisions on paper

After implementation of program:

  • Give clear, explicit, targeted and non-ambiguous information concerning qualifications of new employees.
  • Give clear, explicit, targeted and non-ambiguous feedback concerning performance to employees.