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Reactions to Witnessing Ethnic Microaggressions: An Experimental Study
13
Citations
32
References
2020
Year
EthnicityDiscriminationRacial PrejudiceEducationHealth DisparitiesEthnic Group RelationRacial DisparitiesPsychologySocial SciencesRaceAfrican American StudiesBlack WomenNegative AffectEthnic StudiesPrejudiceMinority StudiesWitnessing Ethnic MicroaggressionsRacismMinority StressEthnic DiscriminationMinimal ResearchSocial IdentityColorblind Racial AttitudesRacialization StudiesCardiovascular ReactivityCultureMicroaggression
Introduction: Minimal research has examined how witnesses identify and respond to ethnic microaggressions including the role of colorblind racial attitudes. Method: University student participants (N = 401) were randomly assigned to one of three experimental conditions in which they witnessed a research decoy experiencing an ethnic microaggression, an overt discriminatory interaction, or a neutral interaction (control). Results: The study findings showed that 46% of participants who witnessed an ethnic microaggression identified it as unfair or differential treatment compared to 84% of those who observed an overt form of discrimination. Multilevel model analyses revealed a 3-way interaction (time × experimental condition × colorblind racial attitudes) such that participants with low colorblind racial attitudes had significant increases in negative affect and systolic blood pressure after witnessing overt discrimination. Discussion: Key differences exist in the identification and responses associated with witnessing an ethnic microaggression compared to overt discrimination. Findings suggest that shifting colorblind racial attitudes may be a promising area of intervention to improve detection of ethnic microaggressions.
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