Perceptions of the intergroup structure and anti-Asian prejudice among white Australians


Autoria(s): Johnson, Daniel; Terry, Deborah J.; Louis, Winnifred R.
Contribuinte(s)

Abrams, Dominic

Hogg, Michael

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Subjective intergroup beliefs and authoritarianism were assessed in a field study (N=255) of White Australians' anti-Asian stereotyping and prejudice. A social identity analysis of intergroup prejudice was adopted, such that perceptions of the intergroup structure (instability, permeability, legitimacy and higher ingroup status) were proposed as predictors of higher prejudice (blatant and covert) and less favorable stereotyping. Consistent with the social identity approach, both independent and interacting roles for sociostructural predictors of Anti-Asian bias were observed, even after demographic and personality variables were controlled. For example, perceived legitimacy was associated with higher prejudice when White Australians' status position relative to Asian Australians was valued. Moreover, when participants evaluated Whites' position as unstable and high status or legitimate, perceptions of permeable intergroup boundaries were associated with anti-Asian bias. The present findings demonstrate status protection responses in advantaged group members in a field setting, lending weight to the contention that perceptions of sociostructural threat interact to predict outgroup derogation. Implications for theories of intergroup relations are discussed.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:78357

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Sage

Palavras-Chave #Psychology, Social #Intergroup Relations #Prejudice #Social Identity Theory #Group Boundaries #Social Identity #Identification #Permeability #Legitimacy #Strategies #Membership #Stability #Attitudes #Mobility #C1 #380105 Social and Community Psychology
Tipo

Journal Article