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Introduction to Prejudice

Understand the definition, components, causes, impacts, and strategies for reducing prejudice.
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How is prejudice defined in terms of attitude toward a person or group?
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Summary

Understanding Prejudice What Is Prejudice? Prejudice is a pre-formed, usually negative attitude directed toward a person or group based on characteristics such as race, gender, age, religion, sexual orientation, or other social identifiers. The key word here is "pre-formed"—it means the attitude exists before you have direct experience with the person or group. This distinction is crucial: prejudice differs from a reasoned judgment, which develops from personal experience or evidence. If you dislike someone after working with them and observing their behavior, that's a judgment. If you dislike someone because of their race, gender, or religion before ever meeting them, that's prejudice. Prejudice is essentially a mental shortcut—a quick conclusion drawn without proper investigation. Prejudice is often rooted in stereotypes, which are oversimplified, generalized beliefs about a group. For example, the stereotype that "all lawyers are aggressive" might fuel prejudice against lawyers. However, it's important to note that prejudice persists even when contradictory information is presented. Someone might meet a kind lawyer, yet maintain their prejudice because they dismiss the exception as unusual, rather than reconsidering their overall belief. The Three Components of Prejudice Psychologists have identified that prejudice operates on three interconnected levels: Cognitive Component (Beliefs): This is the stereotyped thinking—the specific beliefs you hold about a group. For instance, stereotyped beliefs might include "members of group X are lazy" or "members of group Y are wealthy." These are the mental generalizations that form the foundation of prejudice. Affective Component (Feelings): This is the emotional dimension—the feelings of dislike, fear, or hostility that accompany the beliefs. You might feel anxious around certain groups, disgusted by them, or harbor resentment. These emotions can be strong and automatic, arising even before conscious thought. Behavioral Tendency Component (Actions): This is the desire or intent to act on the negative feelings. This component is closely related to discrimination, which is the actual behavior of treating someone unfairly based on prejudice. It's important to note: prejudice is the attitude (what you think and feel), while discrimination is the action (what you do). You can be prejudiced without discriminating, but discrimination is almost always fueled by prejudice. <extrainfo> These three components don't always move in lockstep. Someone might have negative stereotypical beliefs but control their behavior, while another person might feel strong negative emotions even if they consciously reject stereotypes. Understanding all three helps explain why prejudice is complex and difficult to eliminate. </extrainfo> How Prejudice Forms and Persists Prejudice doesn't emerge in a vacuum. It develops and persists through two primary mechanisms: Intergenerational Transmission: Prejudice can persist across generations through cultural norms, laws, and institutions. When children grow up in environments where prejudicial attitudes are normalized, they internalize these beliefs as "just how things are." Historical laws and institutional practices that discriminated against certain groups created systems that maintained prejudice across time, even as explicit laws changed. Social Learning: Individuals adopt biased attitudes from family, peers, media, and broader society. We learn prejudice much like we learn other attitudes and behaviors—by observing and imitating others. If you hear parents, teachers, or peers express prejudiced views, and especially if those views go unchallenged, you're likely to absorb them. Media representations also powerfully shape prejudiced attitudes by reinforcing stereotypes. Why Prejudice Exists: Theoretical Explanations Understanding the origins of prejudice requires examining both evolutionary and social factors. Evolutionary In-Group Favoritism: Evolutionary psychology suggests that humans developed a natural tendency to favor in-group members—those who belong to our own group—because this promoted survival in ancestral environments. This "in-group favoritism" may have been adaptive when groups competed for scarce resources. This biological predisposition might make us naturally inclined to trust and cooperate with those similar to us and be wary of out-group members. However, this biological tendency does not make prejudice inevitable; culture and learning shape whether this tendency translates into actual prejudice. Perceived Threats and Competition: Prejudice intensifies when groups are perceived as economic or political threats. Economic competition for jobs, resources, or power can amplify prejudicial attitudes. When groups are explicitly portrayed as threatening or competing for the same opportunities, prejudice becomes stronger. This helps explain why prejudice often increases during economic downturns or when groups compete for political influence. Social Learning Theory: As mentioned earlier, social learning theory emphasizes that prejudice is learned through observation and imitation of others who express biased attitudes. Environments where prejudice is modeled, reinforced, and normalized create prejudiced individuals. Conversely, environments where prejudice is challenged and diverse perspectives are valued reduce prejudicial attitudes. Consequences of Prejudice Prejudice doesn't just remain an abstract attitude—it has profound real-world consequences for both individuals and society. Individual Consequences For those targeted by prejudice, the consequences are serious: Psychological Stress: Experiencing prejudice causes stress, anxiety, and worry about being judged or treated unfairly. Reduced Self-Esteem: Being regularly told you are inferior, unwelcome, or inadequate—whether explicitly or implicitly—erodes self-worth and confidence. Limited Opportunities: Prejudice creates barriers in education, employment, and social advancement. Someone might be denied a job, loan, housing, or educational opportunity because of prejudiced hiring or admission practices. Health Implications: Chronic exposure to prejudice contributes to serious health problems, including hypertension, depression, and shortened lifespan. The stress of persistent discrimination literally harms the body. Societal Consequences The effects extend far beyond individuals: Discrimination: Prejudice fuels discriminatory practices—institutional policies and individual behaviors that disadvantage out-group members. Discrimination is prejudice in action. Social Inequality: Prejudice contributes to systemic inequality across economic, political, and educational domains. Entire groups can be locked out of wealth-building opportunities, political representation, and quality education. Conflict and Social Division: Prejudice can incite intergroup conflict, creating hostility between communities and eroding social cohesion. Societies divided by prejudice become less stable and cooperative. Undermining Democratic Values: Prejudice directly contradicts democratic principles of fairness and equal treatment. When some citizens are treated as less worthy than others, democracy cannot function properly. Strategies for Reducing Prejudice The good news is that prejudice, while deeply ingrained, can be reduced through intentional effort: Self-Reflection on Biases: The foundation of change is recognizing your own biases. Most people hold some prejudiced attitudes unconsciously—we've absorbed them from our environment. Examining your own automatic reactions, the stereotypes you hold, and the assumptions you make is the crucial first step. This is uncomfortable work, but it's necessary. Engaging with Diverse Perspectives: Direct contact with members of out-groups, especially in collaborative contexts where people work together as equals toward common goals, helps challenge stereotypical beliefs. Reading about, hearing from, and working with people from different backgrounds exposes you to individual variation within groups, which contradicts stereotypes. When you meet people who don't fit the stereotype, it becomes harder to maintain the stereotype. Empathy Development: Consciously practicing empathy—putting yourself in others' shoes and understanding their experiences, feelings, and perspectives—reduces hostile attitudes. When you genuinely understand what it's like to experience prejudice or face barriers because of your identity, you're less likely to maintain that prejudice. Empathy humanizes out-group members and makes prejudice psychologically difficult to sustain.
Flashcards
How is prejudice defined in terms of attitude toward a person or group?
A pre-formed, usually negative attitude based on social identifiers like race, gender, or religion.
How does prejudice differ from a reasoned judgment?
It is not based on personal experience or evidence.
In what oversimplified beliefs is prejudice often rooted?
Stereotypes.
How does prejudice typically respond to contradictory information?
It persists even when such information is presented.
What are the three core components of prejudice?
Cognitive component (stereotyped beliefs) Affective component (feelings of dislike or hostility) Behavioral tendency component (intent to act, such as discrimination)
What does the cognitive component of prejudice consist of?
Stereotyped beliefs about the target group.
What feelings characterize the affective component of prejudice?
Dislike, fear, or hostility toward the target group.
What does the behavioral tendency component of prejudice involve?
The desire or intent to act on negative feelings, such as through discrimination.
From which sources do individuals typically adopt biased attitudes according to social learning?
Family, peers, media, and broader society.
What survival-based tendency do evolutionary theories suggest contributes to prejudice?
In-group favoritism.
According to social learning theory, how is prejudice acquired?
By observing and imitating others who express biased attitudes.

Quiz

Which component of prejudice involves the stereotyped beliefs about a target group?
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Key Concepts
Prejudice and Discrimination
Prejudice
Stereotype
Discrimination
Social Inequality
Intergroup Conflict
Psychological Effects
Empathy
Psychological Stress
Health Disparities
Social Dynamics
In‑group Favoritism
Social Learning Theory