Publication | Closed Access
Investigating the Interplay Between Race, Work Ethic Stereotypes, and Attitudes Toward Welfare Recipients and Policies
19
Citations
21
References
2021
Year
Public WelfareDiscriminationRacial PrejudiceEducationRacial DisparitiesWelfare RecipientsSocial SciencesRaceInterplay Between RaceAfrican American StudiesStereotypesRacismHuman WelfareEthnic DiscriminationGender DiscriminationRacial EquitySocial InequalitySocial IdentityEconomic DiscriminationApplied Social PsychologySocial BiasWork Ethic StereotypesSociologySocial PolicyWelfare Benefits
The current research investigates the role of racialized work ethic stereotypes on attitudes toward welfare. We hypothesized that work ethic stereotypes shape both people’s attitudes toward welfare and their perceptions of who benefits from these policies. Consistent with hypotheses, when the demographic composition of welfare recipients was majority Black (vs. White), participants thought recipients were lazier and were less positive to welfare programs and policies (Study 1). Describing welfare recipients as hardworking (vs. no information control) mitigated this effect, even when the demographic composition of welfare recipients was majority Black (Study 2). Finally, we investigated whether work ethic stereotypes shape both attitudes toward welfare and spontaneous mental images of recipients. Images generated when participants were asked to envision hardworking (vs. lazy) recipients were rated by a separate sample as more representative of White Americans and garnered more support for providing welfare benefits (Study 3).
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1