Publication | Closed Access
Valuing Differences and Reinforcing Them: Multiculturalism Increases Race Essentialism
97
Citations
52
References
2018
Year
EthnicityDiscriminationRacial PrejudiceEducationEthnic Group RelationColor BlindnessPsychologySocial SciencesRaceAfrican American StudiesCultural DiversityDiversity SensitivityRacial GroupEthnic StudiesPrejudiceMinority StudiesRacismEthnic DiscriminationRace EssentialismSocial IdentityEconomic DiscriminationRacialization StudiesMulticulturalismCultureRacial EqualityRace RelationEssentialismSocial Diversity
A substantial body of research on diversity philosophies has shown that multiculturalism (i.e., emphasizing and valuing cultural/ethnic differences) is a more effective way to promote equality and reduce bias than color blindness (i.e., deemphasizing cultural/ethnic differences in lieu of similarities). However, across two experiments, we present evidence for an unexpectedly negative outcome of multiculturalism: increased belief in race essentialism, or the notion that racial group differences are valid, biologically based, and immutable. Study 1 ( N = 165) shows that participants exposed to multiculturalism expressed greater race essentialist beliefs compared to those exposed to color blindness. Study 2 ( N = 150) replicates this effect and also finds that exposure to multiculturalism, compared to color blindness, decreased participants’ belief that racial equality is a problem. These findings raise the ironic possibility that well-intentioned efforts to portray the value of differences may reinforce the belief that fixed, biological characteristics underpin them.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1