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Researchers explore the effects of the Black Lives Matter protests on racial bias


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Researchers explore the effects of the ****** Lives Matter protests on ******* bias

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Credit: Life Matters from Pexels

The ******* of George Floyd in 2020 revived the ****** Lives Matter movement, a large scale social movement that aims to highlight and reduce structural racism and inequality in the ******* States. The movement—and its coverage—strongly affected how white Americans thought about ****** Americans, shows Ph.D. researcher Max Primbs.

In his research program, Primbs investigated the influence of our social and cultural environment on our prejudices. “Everyone has associations with certain groups of people,” he explained.

“For example, white people tend to associate ****** people often with negative themes, such as ****** or *********. Importantly, this type of prejudice does not necessarily reflect people’s explicit opinions, nor is it necessarily an accurate reflection of reality. Instead, these associations and the resulting biases are influenced by how these groups are talked about in your environment: in your social circle, but also by politicians or in coverage on news channels or social media.”

The findings are

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in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.

Those prejudices can have far-reaching consequences. For example, ****** Americans are disproportionately more likely to be shot by police in regions where white people are more prejudiced. Attempts at permanently reducing these biases have so far been futile and most interventions psychologists developed have no lasting effects.

Primbs wanted to know if a natural change in our social and cultural environment—a large scale protest movement that shook the nation—would fare better at changing people’s minds and making them less prejudiced? The BLM protests were a great opportunity to investigate this.

“The protests arose overnight and achieved tremendous scale immediately,” Primbs said. “The effect was quickly visible in the data: white Americans suddenly thought much less negatively about ****** Americans after George Floyd’s ******.”

Negative associations

The researchers used data from the Project Implicit database, combined with data from

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Trends, a protests database, and other sources. Because directly asking people what they think about ********* groups often gives responses distorted by social desirability, they used a computerized task: In the task, people have to designate certain words as “good” or “bad” by pressing a button and use the same buttons to designate pictures of faces as “******” or “white.”

Subjects usually are faster at categorizing a face as white, if “white” and “good” share a button compared to if “******” and “good” share a button. This means they have more positive associations with white people compared to ****** people.

The more negative association with ****** people diminished during the BLM protests, immediately after the onset of the protests. But Primbs also saw that attention to BLM waned somewhat again a few weeks after George Floyd’s ******. This could be seen, for example, in

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Trends: there were fewer and fewer searches for terms like ****** Lives Matter and George Floyd. As attention to ****** Lives Matter faded, bias began to increase again, almost reaching pre-BLM level again towards the end of 2020.

Policy change

That the BLM protests had little effect in the long run has to do with fading attention and a lack of long-term policy changes. “If you want lasting change in attitudes, changes in policy seem paramount: they facilitate cultural change very strongly. An example of that is a study by Dr. Eugene Ofosu showing that the Supreme Court decision to legalize gay marriage accelerated the decrease in implicit bias towards gay and ******** people.”

Donald Trump’s role cannot be underestimated, according to Primbs. “He has normalized hateful rhetoric in the ******* States.”

Politicians have an important role model, according to the scholar, and can also introduce policies to promote equality. Primbs said, “It’s always good if you can mobilize people in protests. That way you raise awareness around an issue, such as racism. But to bring about lasting change, you need new policies. Otherwise, you are quickly back to square one as soon as the attention for the subject slackens again.”

More information:
Maximilian A. Primbs et al, The Effects of the 2020 BLM Protests on ******* Bias in the ******* States, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (2024).

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Provided by
Radboud University Nijmegen


Citation:
Researchers explore the effects of the ****** Lives Matter protests on ******* bias (2024, September 16)
retrieved 16 September 2024
from

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.




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#Researchers #explore #effects #****** #Lives #Matter #protests #******* #bias

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