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Chapter Seven Race & Ethnicity

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1 Chapter Seven Race & Ethnicity

2 Laying the Sociological Foundation
Race - a group with inherited physical characteristics that distinguish it from another group. Race has no genetic basis. Race is a myth, a fabrication of the human mind. Depends upon the society in which meaning is constructed. Race is modern idea. No race is superior to others. No “pure” race exists. The idea of race is no myth, it is a powerful force in our lives.

3 Ethnic Groups Ethnicity -people who identify with one another on the basis of common ancestry and cultural heritage. The melting pot - many groups quietly blending into a sort of ethnic stew. People who identify with each other on the basis of a common ancestry and cultural heritage are known as_____________

4 Minority and Dominant Groups
Minority groups - people who are singled out for unequal treatment and who regard themselves as objects of collective discrimination. Have a shared sense of identity. Tend to have lesser power, privileges, and social status. It has nothing to do with numbers. Dominant groups - they have the greatest power, most privileges, and highest social status.

5 Prejudice & Discrimination
Discrimination - an action. Unfair treatment directed against someone. Individual - negative treatment of one person by another. Institutional - discrimination woven into society. Prejudice - an attitude. A negative prejudging. Racism - when the basis of discrimination is race.

6 Theories of Prejudice

7 Psychological Perspectives
Frustration and Scapegoats - prejudice is the result of frustration, and scapegoats become targets of blame. The Authoritarian personality –highly prejudiced people are insecure, conformist, submissive to superiors, and have deep respect for authority.

8 Sociological Perspectives
Functionalism - prejudice is functional for society and creates in group solidarity. Conflict Theory - divisions among workers deflect anger and hostility away from the capitalists and toward minority groups. Symbolic Interactionism - labels we learn color the way we see people. Selective perception- leads us to see things a certain way and blinds us to others. When the use of labels are used in a way that causes people to look at members of a group as if they were all alike is referred to as selective perception. Consider the middlle east and Irish conflicts.

9 Global Patterns of Intergroup Relations
Genocide - the systematic annihilation of a race or ethnic group. Labeling the targeted group as less than fully human facilitates genocide. Population transfer - causing a minority group to relocate. Internal colonialism - how a country’s dominant group exploits minority groups.

10 Segregation, Assimilation, and Multiculturalism
Segregation - the formal separation of racial or ethnic groups. Assimilation - the process by which a minority group is absorbed into the mainstream culture. Multiculturalism - permits and encourages racial and ethnic variation. Groups maintain separate identities yet fully participate.

11 Race and Ethnic Relations
In the United States today

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13 African Americans African Americans have made remarkable gains since the Civil Right Movement. Composed of two distinct groups: those mired in poverty and the educational elite. Despite the gains, they continue to lag behind in politics, economics, and education. Social Class is now becoming more important than race in determining the life chances of African Americans.

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15 Latinos Today, Latinos are the second largest minority group in the U.S.. The U.S. has become one of the largest Spanish speaking nations in the world. For Latinos, country of origin is very important. The group is fragmented within itself, and at odds with the African American population.

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17 Asian Americans From the time of their arrival to the U.S., Asians have suffered discrimination. Today, Asian Americans are the fastest growing minority in the U.S.. They have a higher income than any other racial-ethnic group. Their children are most likely to be raised in a two parent family.

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19 Native Americans In the eighteenth century, native Americans numbered between 5 and 10 million. Today, they number about 2 million. Native Americans are called the “invisible minority.” There has been a systematic attempt of European Americans to destroy Native Americans’ way of life.

20 Looking Toward the Future
**The color line remains one of the most volatile topics facing the nation. The U.S. has both welcomed immigration and feared it’s consequences. Affirmative action has had a modest impact. In a true multicultural society, minority groups will participate fully while maintaining their cultural integrity. A wide spread concern that exists in the United States is that an increase in the Immigrant population will diminish English as the primary language.

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