期刊
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
卷 120, 期 3, 页码 601-625出版社
AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/pspa0000257
关键词
hierarchy maintenance; inequality; race-status associations; stereotypes
资金
- National Science Foundation
- Princeton University
This article examines the association between race and status, highlighting the connection of White Americans with high status and Black Americans with low status. The study found that job-based race-status associations can predict racial bias and social dominance orientation, while rank- and attribute-based associations are related to preferences for undoing racial inequality. The research suggests that only White Americans' job-based stratifying associations contribute to maintaining racial status hierarchies.
Race is fraught with meaning, but unequal status is central. Race-status associations (RSAs) link White Americans with high status and Black Americans with low status. RSAs could occur via observation of racially distributed jobs, perceived status-related stereotypic attributes, or simple ranking. Nine samples (N = 3,933) validate 3 novel measures of White = high status/Black = low status RSAs-based on jobs, rank, and attributes. First, RSA measures showed clear factor structure, internal validity, and test-retest reliability. Second, these measures differentially corresponded to White Americans' hierarchy-maintaining attitudes, beliefs, and preferences. Potentially based on observation, the more spontaneous Job-based RSAs predicted interracial bias, social dominance orientation, meritocracy beliefs, and hierarchy-maintaining hiring or policy preferences. Preference effects held after controlling for bias and support for the status quo. In contrast, the more deliberate Rank- and Attribute-based RSAs negatively predicted hierarchy-maintaining beliefs and policy preferences; direct inferences of racial inequality linked to preferences for undoing it. Third, Black = low status, rather than White = high status, associations largely drove these effects. Finally, Black Americans also held RSAs; Rank- or Attribute-based RSAs predicted increased perceived discrimination, reduced social dominance, and reduced meritocracy beliefs. Although individuals' RSAs vary, only White Americans' Job-based stratifying associations help maintain racial status hierarchies. Theory-guided evidence of race-status associations introduces powerful new assessment tools.
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