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  • Broschiertes Buch

This book details a social psychological study of prejudice and moral exclusion. The author investigated whether participants, 47 non-Muslim U.S. citizens enrolled at a Midwestern university, considered Muslim Americans to be within their scope of justice, and whether principles of fairness, restitution, and corrective intervention would be applied to a stimulus Muslim family. Only about one-third of the sample indicated that the Muslim family fell within their scope of justice. Open-ended responses yielded three patterns: (1) threat and revenge toward the out-group; (2) concern with the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book details a social psychological study of prejudice and moral exclusion. The author investigated whether participants, 47 non-Muslim U.S. citizens enrolled at a Midwestern university, considered Muslim Americans to be within their scope of justice, and whether principles of fairness, restitution, and corrective intervention would be applied to a stimulus Muslim family. Only about one-third of the sample indicated that the Muslim family fell within their scope of justice. Open-ended responses yielded three patterns: (1) threat and revenge toward the out-group; (2) concern with the rights of out-group members; and (3) disconnection from the out-group, along with ambivalence about justice issues. Although explicitly racist statements were detected, so too was a recognition of common humanity with out-group members.
Autorenporträt
Coryn, Chris L. S.§Dr. Chris L. S. Coryn is an Assistant Professor in Evaluation, Measurement, and Research and Director of the Interdisciplinary Ph.D. in Evaluation Program at Western Michigan University.