Login / Signup

The role of status in the early emergence of pro-White bias in rural Uganda.

Julia MarshallAnton GollwitzerKellen Mermin-BunnellTara Mandalaywala
Published in: Developmental science (2022)
Research investigating the early emergence of racial prejudice has been largely limited to contexts in which racial prejudice is most likely to emerge-multiracial societies that have pronounced racial inequality (e.g., United States, South Africa). The present study assessed whether pro-White racial bias is also early emerging in a homogenous Black community that has little exposure to modern media and where children presumably experience less overt discrimination than in past samples. Black African children (N = 214) between 5- and 12-years-old living in rural Uganda exhibited substantial pro-White racial bias, preferring White over Black children 78% of the time. Ugandan children also judged White children as higher status than Black children, and these status judgments predicted their degree of pro-White bias. Our results indicate that pro-White racial biases can emerge even in a homogenous Black community and that, in some contexts, minimal status cues can be sufficient for the early development of racial prejudice.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • south africa
  • african american
  • healthcare
  • anti inflammatory
  • mental health
  • human immunodeficiency virus
  • hiv positive