Transcript CHAPTER 5

Minority Groups and U.S. Society:
Themes, Patterns, and the Future
Chapter Ten
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
The Importance of Subsistence
Technology
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Dominant-minority relations are shaped by large social,
political, and economic forces and change as these broad
characteristics change.
 In the colonial United States, minority relations flowed from
the colonists’ desire to control both land and labor.
 New technologies of the industrial revolution increased the
productivity of the economy and eventually changed every
aspect of life in the United States.
 In the post-industrial society, the processes that allowed
upward mobility for European Americans failed to work for
racial minority groups, who confronted urban poverty,
bankrupt cities, and continuing barriers of racial prejudice
and institutional discrimination.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
The Importance of Subsistence
Technology
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The emerging information-based, high-tech society is unlikely to
offer many opportunities for people with lower educational
backgrounds and occupational skills.
Upgraded urban educational systems, job training programs and
other community development programs might alter the grim
scenario of continued exclusion.
Inaction and perpetuation of the status quo will bar a large
percentage of the population from the emerging mainstream
economy, keeping it mired in competition with newer immigrants for
jobs in the low-wage, secondary labor market or in alternative
opportunity structures, including crime.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
The Importance of the Contact Situation,
Group Competition, and Power
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The contact situation is key to understanding the development
of dominant-minority group relations.
Immigrant and colonized minority groups is a distinction basic
that helps clarify group relations centuries after the initial
contact period.
 Prejudice, racism, and discrimination against African
Americans remain formidable forces in contemporary
America.
 In contrast, prejudice and discrimination against European
American groups have nearly disappeared today.
 Ethnic enclaves provided another pathway to integration.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
The Importance of the Contact Situation,
Group Competition, and Power
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The relevance of ethnocentrism is largely limited to the
actual contact situation.
There have been numerous instances in which group
competition—or even the threat of competition—increased
prejudice and led to greater discrimination and more
repression.
Following the initial contact, the superior power of the
dominant group helps it sustain the inferior position of the
minority group, but minority groups characteristically use
what they have in an attempt to improve their situation.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
The Importance of the Contact Situation,
Group Competition, and Power
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It is obvious that competition and differences in power resources will
continue to shape intergroup relations (including relations between
minority groups themselves) well into the future.
Because they are so basic, jobs will continue to be primary objects
of competition, but debates about crime and the criminal justice
system, welfare reform, national health care policy, school busing,
bilingual education, immigration policy, and multicultural curricula in
schools will continue to separate us along ethnic and racial lines.
These deep divisions reflect fundamental realities about who gets
what in the United States, and they will continue to reflect the
distribution of power and stimulate competition along group lines for
generations to come.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Diversity within Minority Groups
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Minority group members vary from each other by age, sex,
region of residence, levels of education, urban versus rural
residence, political ideology, and many other variables.
The experience of one segment of the group (collegeeducated, fourth-generation, native-born Chinese American
females) may bear little resemblance to the experience of
another (illegal Chinese male immigrants with less than a high
school education), and the problems of some members may
not be the problems of others.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Diversity within Minority Groups
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One clear conclusion we can make about gender is that minority
group females are doubly oppressed and disempowered.
Limited by both their racial/ethnic and gender status, they are
among the most vulnerable and exploited segments of the
society.
At one time or another, the women of every minority group have
taken the least-desirable, lowest-status positions available in the
economy, often while trying to raise children and attend to other
family needs.
They have been expected to provide support for other members
of their families, kinship groups, and communities, often
sacrificing their own self-interest to the welfare of others.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Diversity within Minority Groups
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The problems and issues of minority women are
complexly tied to the patterns of inequality and
discrimination in the larger society and within their own
groups.
Solving the problems faced by minority groups will not
resolve the problems faced by minority women and
neither will resolving the problems of gender inequality
alone.
Articulating and addressing these difficulties requires the
recognition of the complex interactions between gender
and minority group status.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Assimilation and Pluralism
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The idea that assimilation is a linear, inevitable process has
little support.
Also without support is the notion that there is always a
simple, ordered relationship between the various stages of
assimilation: acculturation, integration into public institutions,
integration into the private sector, and so forth.
Since the 1960s, as many minority spokespersons have
questioned the very desirability of assimilation and pluralistic
themes increased in prominence as the commitment of the
larger society to racial equality faltered.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Assimilation and Pluralism
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African Americans are highly acculturated, yet present a
mixed picture in terms of integration.
There is evidence that American Indian culture and
language may be increasing in strength and vitality, but
on many measures of integration, American Indians
remain the most isolated and impoverished minority
group in the United States.
Hispanic traditions and the Spanish language have been
sustained by exclusion and immigration, yet integration
is highly variable by Latino ethnic group.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Assimilation and Pluralism
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Only European American ethnic groups seem to
approximate the traditional model of assimilation, yet
total assimilation is far from accomplished.
Group membership continues to be important because it
continues to be linked to fundamental patterns of
exclusion and inequality.
The group divisions forged in the past and perpetuated
over the decades by racism and discrimination will
remain to the extent that racial and ethnic group
membership continues to be correlated with inequality
and position in the social class structure.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Assimilation and Pluralism
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Some (perhaps most) of the impetus behind the preservation of
ethnic and racial identity may be a result of the most vicious and
destructive intergroup competition.
In other ways, though, ethnicity can be a positive force that helps
people locate themselves in time and space and understand their
position in the contemporary world.
Ethnicity remains an important aspect of self-identity and pride for
many Americans from every group and tradition.
It seems unlikely that this sense of a personal link to particular
groups and heritages within U.S. society will soon fade.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Assimilation and Pluralism
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Some important questions to ask include:
 “What blend of pluralistic and assimilationist policies will serve us best
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in the 21st century?”
Are there ways in which the society can prosper without repressing our
diversity?
How can we increase the degree of openness, fairness, and justice
without threatening group loyalties?
How much unity do we need? How much diversity can we tolerate?
The one-way, Anglo-conformity mode of assimilation of the past is
too narrow and destructive to be a blueprint for the future, but the
more extreme forms of minority group pluralism and separatism
might be equally dangerous.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
Minority Group Progress and the
Ideology of American Individualism
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The United States has become more tolerant and open, and
minority group members can be found at the highest levels of
success, affluence, and prestige.
However, it seems that negative intergroup feelings and
stereotypes have not so much disappeared as merely
changed form—modern or symbolic racism.
Many would argue that the most serious problems facing
contemporary minority groups are structural and institutional,
and not individual or personal.
Survival and success in America for all minority groups has
had more to do with group processes than with individual will
or motivation.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
A Final Word
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U.S. society and its minority groups are linked in fractious
unity.
This society owes its prosperity and position of prominence
in the world no less to the land and labor of minority groups
than to that of the dominant group.
By harnessing the labor and energy of these minority
groups, the nation has grown prosperous and powerful, but
the benefits have flowed disproportionately to the dominant
group.
As we begin the 21st century, the dilemmas of America’s
minority groups remain perhaps the primary unresolved
domestic issue facing the nation.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.
A Final Word
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The answers of the past—the faith in assimilation and the
belief that success in America is open to all who simply try
hard enough—have proved inadequate, even destructive and
dangerous, because they help to sustain the belief that the
barriers to equality no longer exist and that any remaining
inequalities are the problems of the minority groups, not the
larger society.
A society that finds a way to deal fairly and humanely with the
problems of diversity and difference, prejudice and inequality,
and racism and discrimination can provide a sorely needed
model for other nations and, indeed, for the world.
Healey. Diversity and Society: Race, Ethnicity, and Gender 4e
© 2014 SAGE Publications, Inc.