The strategic use of stereotypes about immigrants
The strategic use of stereotypes about immigrants
Are immigrants lazy people who enjoy living on social security? Or are they cheap hard-workers that steal our jobs? Such contradictory terms can be used to characterize the same immigrant group, even by the same person. Past research has shown that variability in the use of stereotypes can stem from making different comparisons in different contexts (Oakes et al., 1994). Others have argued that stereotypical characterizations can also be affected by communicative goals, i.e., what a particular person wishes to communicate about a particular group in a given context (Klein et al., 2007). However, the latter idea has not yet been systematically examined. On the one hand, experimental research has shown how goals can affect the description of others in terms that favors or discourages stereotyping (Semin et al., 2003), but not how they can affect the particular traits used by people when stereotyping. On the other hand, research focusing more directly on this issue has relied upon non-experimental methodology (e.g., Reicher et al., 1997) and does not provide us with a precise understanding of the processes involved.
This project aims to go further than previous research by experimentally examining how stereotypical characterizations of immigrant groups vary according to the particular goals of the group to which the perceiver belongs (e.g., goals linked to ideologies regarding immigration) and the specific communicative context. In doing so, we also aim to investigate the precise process through which this might occur. Not only does this address a gap in existing research, but it is also an issue of direct social relevance. Indeed, strategic variability in the stereotypical traits used to describe immigrants might very well constitute one of the main tools through which positive or negative attitudes towards immigration as a whole are perpetuated. That is, flexibility at one level might be what allows stability at another level to be maintained.
Project The strategic use of stereotypes about immigrants - PTDC/PSI-PSO/120892/2010 - Financed by FCT
Social identity;
Immigrants;
Stereotypes;
Politics
Are immigrants lazy people who enjoy living on social security? Or are they cheap hard-workers that steal our jobs? Such contradictory terms can be used to characterize the same immigrant group, even by the same person. Past research has shown that variability in the use of stereotypes can stem from making different comparisons in different contexts (Oakes et al., 1994). Others have argued that stereotypical characterizations can also be affected by communicative goals, i.e., what a particular person wishes to communicate about a particular group in a given context (Klein et al., 2007). However, the latter idea has not yet been systematically examined. On the one hand, experimental research has shown how goals can affect the description of others in terms that favors or discourages stereotyping (Semin et al., 2003), but not how they can affect the particular traits used by people when stereotyping. On the other hand, research focusing more directly on this issue has relied upon non-experimental methodology (e.g., Reicher et al., 1997) and does not provide us with a precise understanding of the processes involved.
This project aims to go further than previous research by experimentally examining how stereotypical characterizations of immigrant groups vary according to the particular goals of the group to which the perceiver belongs (e.g., goals linked to ideologies regarding immigration) and the specific communicative context. In doing so, we also aim to investigate the precise process through which this might occur. Not only does this address a gap in existing research, but it is also an issue of direct social relevance. Indeed, strategic variability in the stereotypical traits used to describe immigrants might very well constitute one of the main tools through which positive or negative attitudes towards immigration as a whole are perpetuated. That is, flexibility at one level might be what allows stability at another level to be maintained.
Project The strategic use of stereotypes about immigrants - PTDC/PSI-PSO/120892/2010 - Financed by FCT