Basics of Intergroup Relations
There's no "I' in Group
Not My (Stereo)Type
I Think, Therefore, I Hate
Groups and Intersections
100

These mental representations, usually negative and exaggerated, make up the Cognitive component of intergroup attitudes

Stereotypes

100

The tendency, fueled by positive distinctiveness, to view one's ingroup as more diverse than others

Outgroup Homogeneity

100

Seeking out and remembering behavior that confirms ones existing stereotypes is an example of THIS.

Confirmation Bias

100

The inclination to give a positive explanation for the status quo, especially if it benefits your ingroup

System Justification

100

Interpretations of intersectionality that suggest marginalization has a cumulative effect

Additive Explanations/Models

200

Behavior that involves acting based on prejudice or favoring certain groups over others

Discrimination

200

Henri Tajfel's theory, often tested using the Minimal Groups Paradigm

Social Identity Theory

200

According to this theory by Alice Eagly, many stereotypes come from a group's historical duties

Social Role Theory

200

The belief that there are innate essences that make things what they are

Essentialism

200

This term refers to aspects of group membership that can be directly perceived

Genotype

300

In the "ABC" model of attitudes, this is the "A."

Prejudice

300

According to this theory, we develop prejudice against outgroups that compete with the ingroup for resources

Realistic Conflict Theory

300

A teacher who has lower expectations of students from a certain background subconsciously behaves in a way that causes students from that background to perform poorly. This is an example of what?

Self-fulfilling prophecy

300

An ideology associated with obedience for authority and traditional values and punishment of deviant ingroup members

Right-Wing Authoritarianism

300

Proponents of THIS perspective argue that small average differences are overblown and group overlap ignored.

Gender Similarity

400

The need to have identities that make us feel good and unique.

Positive distinctiveness

400

An objective that unites two previously conflicting groups

Superordinate Goal

400
Encountering a group that is contradictory to existing group stereotypes often leads to THIS cognitive phenomenon.

Subtyping

400

People high in THIS desire an hierarchy between groups, with their ingroup at the top

Social Dominance Orientation

400

This hypothesis/theory suggests that androcentrism harms men of marginalized groups by exposing them to the most prejudice.

The Subordinate Male Target Hypothesis (aka the Theory of Gendered Prejudice)

500

This phenomenon might cause powerful groups being experiencing higher levels of equality to display more prejudice.

Group Relative Deprivation

500

Despite guaranteeing the most points for their group, participants in Tajfel's studies did not employ this strategy.

Maximum In-group Profit

500

A person with a strong fear of being cancelled for saying something politically incorrect is high in THIS.

External motivation to respond without prejudice

500

An ideology associated with its roots in US history that places a moral value on how hard a worker someone is

Protestant Work Ethic

500

According to this hypothesis, less prototypical group members are not immediately recognized as members of their ingroups.

The Intersectional Invisibility Hypothesis

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