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Social Dominance Orientation and the Legitimization of Inequality Across Cultures
300
Citations
80
References
2000
Year
EthnicityRacial PrejudiceEducationSocial Dominance OrientationEthnic Group RelationSocial SciencesIntergroup RelationGender StudiesSocial ConflictGroup DominancePrejudiceSocial InequalitySocial IdentitySexismEqual OpportunityCultureSocial BiasPopulation InequalitySociologyOppressionSocial Dominance TheorySocial Diversity
The authors tested three hypotheses from social dominance theory in four cultures: (a) that individual differences in social dominance orientation (SDO), or the preference for group-based inequality, can be reliably measured in societies that are group-based hegemonies; (b) that SDO correlates positively with attitudes supporting hegemonic groups and correlates negatively with attitudes supporting oppressed groups; and (c) that men are higher on SDO than women. For the most part, the results confirmed the hypotheses. SDO scales were internally reliable and were administered in English, Chinese, and Hebrew. SDO scores correlated with sexism, measured in culturally appropriate ways, in every culture, and with ethnic prejudice and other attitudes concerning the local hegemony except in China. Men were higher on SDO than women in most samples. Findings are discussed in terms of ideological and psychological facilitators of group dominance.
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