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Systemic racism: individuals and interactions, institutions and society

Systemic racism is a scientifically tractable phenomenon, urgent for cognitive scientists to address. This tutorial reviews the built-in systems that undermine life opportunities and outcomes by racial category, with a focus on challenges to Black Americans. From American colonial history, explicit...

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Published in:Cognitive research: principles and implications 2021-12, Vol.6 (1), p.82-82, Article 82
Main Authors: Banaji, Mahzarin R., Fiske, Susan T., Massey, Douglas S.
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description Systemic racism is a scientifically tractable phenomenon, urgent for cognitive scientists to address. This tutorial reviews the built-in systems that undermine life opportunities and outcomes by racial category, with a focus on challenges to Black Americans. From American colonial history, explicit practices and policies reinforced disadvantage across all domains of life, beginning with slavery, and continuing with vastly subordinated status. Racially segregated housing creates racial isolation, with disproportionate costs to Black Americans’ opportunities, networks, education, wealth, health, and legal treatment. These institutional and societal systems build-in individual bias and racialized interactions, resulting in systemic racism. Unconscious inferences, empirically established from perceptions onward, demonstrate non-Black Americans’ inbuilt associations: pairing Black Americans with negative valences, criminal stereotypes, and low status, including animal rather than human . Implicit racial biases (improving only slightly over time) imbed within non-Black individuals’ systems of racialized beliefs, judgments, and affect that predict racialized behavior. Interracial interactions likewise convey disrespect and distrust. These systematic individual and interpersonal patterns continue partly due to non-Black people’s inexperience with Black Americans and reliance on societal caricatures. Despite systemic challenges, Black Americans are more diverse now than ever, due to resilience (many succeeding against the odds), immigration (producing varied backgrounds), and intermarriage (increasing the multiracial proportion of the population). Intergroup contact can foreground Black diversity, resisting systemic racism, but White advantages persist in all economic, political, and social domains. Cognitive science has an opportunity: to include in its study of the mind the distortions of reality about individual humans and their social groups.
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subjects Advantaged
African American History
African Americans
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Blacks
Cognitive ability
Cognitive Psychology
Cognitive Science
Disadvantaged
Diversity
Experimental Psychology
Housing
Humans
Immigration
Neurosciences
Psychology
Racial Bias
Racial Groups
Racial Relations
Racism
Resistance (Psychology)
Slavery
Social Justice
Stereotypes
Systemic Racism
Systemic Racism: Cognitive Consequences and Interventions
Tutorial Review
United States
United States History
title Systemic racism: individuals and interactions, institutions and society
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