Legal discrimination
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Transcript Legal discrimination
Race
Since ancient times, people have
attempted to group humans in racial
categories based on physical
characteristics
Historically scholars have placed people
into 3 racial groups: Caucasoids,
Mongoloids, and Negroids
Caucasoids
Caucasoids are
white
They are
characterized by
fair skin
Straight or wavy
hair
Mongoloids
Mongoloids are Asian (or
people whose ancestors are
thought to have come from
Asia, such as American
Indians)
Characterized by yellowish
or brownish skin
Distinctive folds on the
eyelids
Negroids
Negroids are black
They are
characterized by
dark skin
Tightly curled hair
Racial Categories
The reality is that people in each category exhibit a
wide range of skin colors and hair textures
It is often hard
to categorize
groups
There are no
biologically
“pure” races
Definition of Race
Race: a category
of people who
share inherited
physical
characteristics
and who others
see as being a
distinct group
Ethnicity
American society consists of people from many
different cultural backgrounds.
Ethnicity is a set of
cultural
characteristics that
distinguish one
group from another
Ethnic Groups
People who share a common cultural background
and common sense of identity are known as an
ethnic group
Ethnic groups are
usually based on
national origin,
religion, language,
customs, and values
Minority Groups
A minority group is a group of people who- because of
their physical characteristics (race) or cultural practices
(ethnicity) are singled out or treated unequally
Characteristics of Minorities
Minorities view themselves as objects of discrimination
Membership in the group is an ascribed status
Group members share a strong bond & sense of group
loyalty
Members tend to practice endogamy- marriage within the
group.
The term has nothing to do with group size, but more so
with power
Example: in South Africa while whites made up 15% of the
population, they dominated the loves of other racial groups in
the nation.
Discrimination
Discrimination is a common feature of the minority
group experience.
Discrimination is the denial of equal treatment to
individuals based on their group membership.
Discrimination involves behaviors of an individual or
society and can range from name calling and rudeness to
acts of violence
Example: In America prior to 1970, 1,170 African
Americans were lynched by white mobs. Many were
lynched for attempting to vote or for desiring equal
treatment.
Societal Discrimination
There are two types of societal discrimination:
Legal discrimination can change when laws are changed
1. Legal discrimination- discrimination upheld by the law
2. Institutionalized discrimination- discrimination that is an
outgrowth of the structure of a society
Institutionalized
discrimination if far more
resistant to change
Prejudice
Prejudice is another common feature
of the minority group experience.
Prejudice is an unsupported
generalization about a category of
people.
Prejudice refers to attitudes and
involve stereotypes
Stereotypes are oversimplified,
exaggerated, or unfavorable
generalizations about a group of
people
White performers would
paint their faces black
and entertain crowds in
minstrel shows from the
1840s-1920s
Stereotypes
When stereotyping, an
individual forms an image of
a particular group and applies
it to all members of the group
When stereotyping happens
long enough, people begin to
believe it
When people believe
stereotypes, it makes it easier
to accept discrimination
Racism
Prejudice beliefs can
justify discrimination
and racism can occur
Racism is the belief
that one’s own race
or ethnic group is
naturally superior to
other races or ethnic
groups
Cultural Pluralism
Cultural pluralism is a policy that allows each group within a
society to keep its unique cultural identity
Assimilation
Assimilation is the blending together of culturally distinct
groups into a single group with a common culture and
identity
Often assimilation occurs voluntarily, but sometimes it is
force on an ethnic group
Segregation
Segregation is a policy to physically separate a minority
group from the dominate group
1. De jure segregation:
segregation based on the law
Example: White-only and
Colored-only bathrooms in
the 1950s
2. De facto segregation:
segregation based on informal
norms
Example: All Black churches