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      Beyond Bigotry : Teaching about Unconscious Prejudice

      , , ,
      Teaching Sociology
      SAGE Publications

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          Why Americans Hate Welfare

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            Do Politicians Racially Discriminate Against Constituents? A Field Experiment on State Legislators

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              Employment discrimination: the role of implicit attitudes, motivation, and a climate for racial bias.

              This study is an attempt to replicate and extend research on employment discrimination by A. P. Brief and colleagues (A. P. Brief, J. Dietz, R. R. Cohen, S. D. Pugh, & J. B. Vaslow, 2000). More specifically, the authors attempted (a) to constructively replicate the prior finding that an explicit measure of modern racism would interact with a corporate climate for racial bias to predict discrimination in a hiring context and (b) to extend this finding through the measurement of implicit racist attitudes and motivation to control prejudice. Although the authors were unable to replicate the earlier interaction, they did illustrate that implicit racist attitudes interacted with a climate for racial bias to predict discrimination. Further, results partially illustrate that motivation to control prejudice moderates the relationship between explicit and implicit attitudes. Taken together, the findings illustrate the differences between implicit and explicit racial attitudes in predicting discriminatory behavior.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Teaching Sociology
                Teach Sociol
                SAGE Publications
                0092-055X
                1939-862X
                March 20 2013
                May 22 2012
                : 41
                : 2
                : 130-143
                Article
                10.1177/0092055X12446757
                2270b025-fdaa-4cdf-a00f-070887ea06c1
                © 2012

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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