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Social privilege

Social privilege is a theory of special advantage or entitlement, which benefits one person, often to the detriment of others. Privileged groups can be advantaged based on education, social class, caste, age, height, weight, nationality, geographic location, disability, ethnic or racial category, gender, gender identity, neurology, sexual orientation, physical attractiveness, religion, and other differentiating factors.[1][2] It is generally considered to be a theoretical concept used in a variety of subjects and often linked to social inequality.[2] Privilege is also linked to social and cultural forms of power.[2] It began as an academic concept, but has since been invoked more widely, outside of academia.[3]

This subject is based on the interactions of different forms of privilege within certain situations.[4] Furthermore, it must be understood as the inverse of social inequality, in that it focuses on how power structures in society aid societally privileged people, as opposed to how those structures oppress others.[4]

History

Writings of W. E. B. Du Bois

 

Arguably, the history of privilege as a concept dates back to American sociologist and historian W. E. B. Du Bois's 1903 book The Souls of Black Folk. Here, he wrote that although African Americans were observant of white Americans and conscious of racial discrimination, white Americans did not think much about African-Americans, nor about the effects of racial discrimination.[5][6][7] In 1935, Du Bois wrote about what he called the "wages of whiteness" held by white Americans. He wrote that these included courtesy and deference, unimpeded admittance to all public functions, lenient treatment in court, and access to the best schools.[8]

Codification of the concept

Early concepts that would lead to the term White Privilege were developed by the Weather Underground in the 1960s.[9][10] In 1988, American feminist and anti-racism activist Peggy McIntosh published "White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences through Work in Women’s Studies". Here, McIntosh documented forty-six privileges which she, as a white person, experienced in the United States. As an example, "I can be sure that if I need legal or medical help, my race will not work against me", and "I do not have to educate my children to be aware of systemic racism for their own daily physical protection". McIntosh described white privilege as an "invisible package of unearned assets" which white people do not want to acknowledge, and which leads to them being confident, comfortable, and oblivious about racial issues, while non-white people become unconfident, uncomfortable, and alienated.[11] McIntosh's essay has been credited for stimulating academic interest in privilege, which has been extensively studied in the decades since.[12]

Overview

Historically, academic study of social inequality focused mainly on the ways in which minority groups were discriminated against, and ignored the privileges accorded to dominant social groups. That changed in the late 1980s, when researchers began studying the concept of privilege.[12]

Privilege, as understood and described by researchers, is a function of multiple variables of varying importance, such as race, age, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, neurology, citizenship, religion, physical ability, health, level of education, and others. Race and gender tend to have the highest impacts given that one is born with these characteristics and they are immediately visible. However, religion, sexuality and physical ability are also highly relevant.[4] Some such as social class are relatively stable and others, such as age, wealth, religion and attractiveness, will or may change over time.[13] Some attributes of privilege are at least partly determined by the individual, such as level of education, whereas others such as race or class background are entirely involuntary.

American sociologist Michael S. Kimmel uses the metaphor of a wind to explain the concept. He explains that when you walk into the wind you have to struggle for each step that you take. When you walk with the wind, you don't feel the wind at all but you still move faster than you would otherwise. The wind is social privilege and if it flows with you, it simply propels you forward with little effort of your own.[4]

In the context of the theory, privileged people are considered to be "the norm", and, as such, gain invisibility and ease in society, with others being cast as inferior variants.[14] Privileged people see themselves reflected throughout society both in mass media and face-to-face in their encounters with teachers, workplace managers and other authorities, which researchers argue leads to a sense of entitlement and the assumption that the privileged person will succeed in life, as well as protecting the privileged person from worry that they may face discrimination from people in positions of authority.[15]

Awareness of privilege

Some academics, such as Peggy McIntosh, highlight a pattern where those who benefit from a type of privilege are unwilling to acknowledge it.[16][17][18] The argument may follow that such a denial constitutes a further injustice against those who do not benefit from the same form of privilege. Derald Wing Sue has referred to such denial as a form of "microaggression" or microinvalidation that negates the experiences of people who don't have privilege and minimizes the impediments they face.[19]

McIntosh wrote that most people are reluctant to acknowledge their privilege, and instead look for ways to justify or minimize the effects of privilege stating that their privilege was fully earned. They justify this by acknowledging the acts of individuals of unearned dominance, but deny that privilege is institutionalized as well as embedded throughout our society. She wrote that those who believe privilege is systemic may nonetheless deny having personally benefited from it, and may oppose efforts to dismantle it.[11] According to researchers[who?], privileged individuals resist acknowledging their privileges because doing so would require them to acknowledge that whatever success they have achieved did not result solely through their own efforts. Instead it was partly due to a system that has developed to support them.[19] The concept of privilege calls into question the idea that society is a meritocracy, which researchers[who?] have argued is particularly unsettling for Americans for whom belief that they live in a meritocracy is a deeply held cultural value, and one that researchers commonly characterize as a myth.[14][20][21][22]

In The Gendered Society, Michael Kimmel wrote that when people at all levels of privilege do not feel personally powerful, arguments that they have benefited from unearned advantages seem unpersuasive.[21][further explanation needed]

Examples of forms of privilege

Educational racism

Racism is the belief that groups of humans possess different behavioral traits corresponding to physical appearance and can be divided based on the superiority of one race over another. This can result in particular ethnic and cultural groups having privileged access to a multitude of resources and opportunities, including education and work positions.

Educational racism has been entrenched in American society since the creation of the United States of America. A system of laws in the 18th and 19th century known as the Black Codes, criminalized the access to education for black people. Until the introduction of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and the Civil Rights Act of 1866, seeking out an education was punishable by the law for them. This thus served to keep African Americans illiterate and only value them as a workforce. However, even after these institutional and legal changes, African Americans were still targeted by educational racism in the form of school segregation in the United States. In the 20th century the fight against educational racism reached its climax with the landmark Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education.[23]

Educational racism also took other forms throughout history such as the creation of Canadian Indian residential school system in 1831, which forcefully integrated indigenous children into schools aimed at erasing their ethnic, linguistic and cultural specificities in order to assimilate them into a white settler society. Until the last residential school closed in 1996, Canada had an educational system which specifically harmed and targeted indigenous children. An estimated 6,000 children died under that system.[24]

Nowadays the opportunity gap pinpoints how educational racism is present in societies. The term refers to "the ways in which race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, English proficiency, community wealth, familial situations, or other factors contribute to or perpetuate lower educational aspirations, achievement, and attainment for certain groups of students."[25] In other words, it is "the disparity in access to quality schools and the resources needed for all children to be academically successful."[26] Concretely this can be seen in the United States by considering how, according to the Schott Foundation's Opportunity to Learn Index, "students from historically disadvantaged families have just a 51 percent Opportunity to Learn when compared to White, non-Latino students."[26]

According to McKinley et al.

Students of color are pushed toward academic failure and continued social disenfranchisement. Racist policies and beliefs, in part, explain why children and young adults from racially marginalized groups fail to achieve academically at the same rate as their White peers.[27]

Heterosexual privilege

Heterosexual privilege can be defined as "the rights and unearned advantages bestowed on heterosexuals in society".[28] There are both institutional and cultural forces encouraging heterosexuality in society.[28] Sexual orientation is a repeated romantic, sexual or emotional attraction to one or multiple genders. There are a variety of categories including heterosexual, gay, lesbian, and bisexual.[29] Heterosexual is considered the normative form of sexual orientation.[1]

Heterosexual privilege is based in the existence of homophobia in society, particularly at the individual level. Between 2014 and 2018, 849 sexual orientation related hate crimes were committed in Canada.[30] Despite the fact that Canada legalized same sex marriage in 2005 and has enshrined the protection of the human rights of all people of all sexual orientations, there is still societal bias against those who do not conform to heterosexuality.[31][32]

Beyond this, institutions such as marriage stop homosexual partners from accessing each other's health insurance, tax benefits or adopting a child together.[28] Same sex marriage is legal in only 27 countries, mostly in the northern hemisphere.[33] This results in an inability for non-heterosexual couples to benefit from the institutional structures that are based on heterosexuality, resulting in privilege for those who are heterosexual.

Intersectionality

Privilege theory argues that each individual is embedded in a matrix of categories and contexts, and will be in some ways privileged and other ways disadvantaged, with privileged attributes lessening disadvantage and membership in a disadvantaged group lessening the benefits of privilege.[17] This can be further supported by the idea of intersectionality, which was coined by Kimberle Crenshaw in 1989.[34] When applying intersectionality to the concept of social privilege, it can be understood as the way one form of privilege can be mitigated by other areas in which a person lacks privilege, for example, a black man who has male privilege but no white privilege.[35] It is also argued that members of privileged social identity groups often don’t recognize their advantages.[36]

Intersections of forms of identity can either enhance privilege or decrease its effects.[37] Psychological analysis has found that people tend to frame their lives on different elements of their identity and therefore frame their lives through the privilege they do or do not have.[38] However, this analysis also found that this framing was stronger amongst certain nationalities, suggesting that identity and privilege may be more central in certain countries.[38] Often people construct themselves in relation to the majority, so ties to identity and therefore degrees of privilege can be stronger for more marginalized groups.

It is important to note that forms of privilege one might have can actually be decreased by the presence of other factors. For example, the feminization of a gay man may reduce his male privilege in addition to already lacking heterosexual privilege.[35] When acknowledging privilege, multifaceted situations must be understood individually. Privilege is a nuanced notion and an intersectional understanding helps bridge gaps in the original analysis.

Criticism

The concept of privilege has been criticized for ignoring relative differences among groups. For example, Lawrence Blum argued that in American culture there are status differences among Chinese, Japanese, Indians, Koreans, and Cambodians, and among African Americans, black immigrants from the Caribbean, and black immigrants from Africa.[39]

Blum agreed that privilege exists and is systemic yet nonetheless criticized the label itself, saying that the word "privilege" implies luxuries rather than rights, and arguing that some benefits of privilege such as unimpeded access to education and housing would be better understood as rights; Blum suggested that privilege theory should distinguish between "spared injustice" and "unjust enrichment" as some effects of being privileged are the former and others the latter. Blum also argued that privilege can end up homogenising both privileged and non-privileged groups when in fact it needs to take account the role of interacting effects and an individual's multiple group identities.[39] "White privilege", Michael Monahan argued, would be more accurately described as the advantages gained by whites through historical disenfranchisement of non-whites rather than something that gives whites privilege above and beyond normal human status.[40]

Psychologist Erin Cooley reported in a study published in 2019 that reading about white privilege decreased social liberals' sympathy for poor whites and increased their will to punish/blame but did not increase their sympathy for poor blacks.[41]

See also

Further reading

  • Phillips, L. Taylor; Lowery, Brian S. (2020). "I ain't no fortunate one: On the motivated denial of class privilege". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 119 (6): 1403–1422. doi:10.1037/pspi0000240. PMID 32551742.
  • Rohlinger, Deana A. (2010). "Privilege". In Ritzer, G.; Ryan, J.M. (eds.). The Concise Encyclopedia of Sociology. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 473–474. ISBN 978-1-44-439264-7.

References

  1. ^ a b Black, Linda L.; Stone, David (2005). "Expanding the Definition of Privilege: The Concept of Social Privilege". Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development. 33 (4): 243–255. doi:10.1002/j.2161-1912.2005.tb00020.x.
  2. ^ a b c Twine, France Winddance (2013). Geographies of Privilege. Routledge. pp. 8–10. ISBN 978-0415519618.
  3. ^ Freeman, Hadley (5 June 2013). "Check your privilege! Whatever that means". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 November 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d S. Kimmel, Michael (17 April 2018). Kimmel, Michael S; Ferber, Abby L (eds.). privilege: A Reader (4 ed.). Fourth Edition. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 2016. Revised edition of Privilege, 2014.: Routledge. pp. 1–11. doi:10.4324/9780429494802. ISBN 9780429494802.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  5. ^ Sullivan, Shannon (2006). Revealing Whiteness: The Unconscious Habits of Racial Privilege. Indiana University Press. pp. 121–123. ISBN 978-0253218483.
  6. ^ Reiland, Rabaka (2007). W.E.B. Du Bois and the Problems of the Twenty-First Century: An Essay on Africana Critical Theory. Lexington Books. p. 3. ISBN 978-0739116821.
  7. ^ Appelrouth, Scott (2007). Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory: Text and Readings. 304-305: SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0761927938.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  8. ^ Kincheloe, Joe L. (2008). Critical Pedagogy Primer. Peter Lang International Academic Publishers. pp. 60–62. ISBN 978-1433101823.
  9. ^ Christensen, Mark (2010). Acid Christ: Ken Kesey, LSD, and the Politics of Ecstasy. IPG. p. 264.
  10. ^ Sine, Peter (1995). The Sixties. Wayne State University Press. p. 222.
  11. ^ a b Kimmel, Michael S. (2009). Privilege: A Reader. Westview Press. pp. 1, 5, 13–26. ISBN 978-0813344263.
  12. ^ a b O'Brien, Jodi A. (2008). Encyclopedia of Gender and Society. SAGE Publications. p. 418. ISBN 978-1412909167.
  13. ^ Sweet, Holly Barlow (2012). Gender in the Therapy Hour: Voices of Female Clinicians Working with Men (The Routledge Series on Counseling and Psychotherapy with Boys and Men). Routledge. p. 71. ISBN 978-0415885515.
  14. ^ a b Case, Kim (2013). Deconstructing Privilege: Teaching and Learning as Allies in the Classroom. Routledge. pp. 63–64. ISBN 978-0415641463.
  15. ^ Sorrells, Kathryn (2012). Intercultural Communication: Globalization and Social Justice. SAGE Publications. pp. 63. ISBN 978-1412927444.
  16. ^ McIntosh, Peggy (4 July 2019), "White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack (1989) 1", On Privilege, Fraudulence, and Teaching as Learning, Routledge, pp. 29–34, doi:10.4324/9781351133791-4, ISBN 9781351133791, S2CID 199169416
  17. ^ a b Garnets, Linda (2002). Psychological Perspectives on Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Experiences. Columbia University Press. p. 391. ISBN 978-0231124133.
  18. ^ Carter, Robert T. (2004). Handbook of Racial-Cultural Psychology and Counseling, Training and Practice. Wiley. p. 432. ISBN 978-0471386292.
  19. ^ a b Sue, Derald Wing (2010). Microaggressions in Everyday Life: Race, Gender, and Sexual Orientation. Wiley. pp. 37–39. ISBN 978-0470491409.
  20. ^ Khan, Shamus Rahman (2012). Privilege: The Making of an Adolescent Elite at St. Paul's School (Princeton Studies in Cultural Sociology). Princeton University Press. pp. 107–108. ISBN 978-0691156231.
  21. ^ a b Halley, Jean (2011). Seeing White: An Introduction to White Privilege and Race. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 67, 191. ISBN 978-1442203075.
  22. ^ Jackson, Yolanda Kaye (2006). Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology. SAGE Publications. p. 471. ISBN 9781452265568.
  23. ^ Bond, Helen (2013), "Racism in Education", Sociology of Education: An A-to-Z Guide, SAGE Publications, Inc., pp. 640–643, doi:10.4135/9781452276151, ISBN 9781452205052, retrieved 21 August 2019
  24. ^ "Residential Schools in Canada | The Canadian Encyclopedia". www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca. Retrieved 21 August 2019.
  25. ^ Partnership, Great Schools (15 May 2013). "Opportunity Gap Definition". The Glossary of Education Reform. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  26. ^ a b "Opportunity Gap - Talking Points | Schott Foundation for Public Education". schottfoundation.org. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  27. ^ Bryan McKinley Jones Brayboy, Angelina E. Castagno and Emma Maughan. Review of Research in Education Vol. 31, Difference, Diversity, and Distinctiveness in Education and Learning (2007), pp. 159-194
  28. ^ a b c Williford, Beth (2009), "Heterosexual Privilege", Encyclopedia of Gender and Society, SAGE Publications, Inc., doi:10.4135/9781412964517.n208, ISBN 9781412909167, retrieved 20 August 2019
  29. ^ "Answers to Your Questions For a Better Understanding of Sexual Orientation and Homosexuality". American Psychological Association. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  30. ^ "Police-reported hate crime, by type of motivation, Canada (selected police services)". Statistics Canada. 8 December 2014. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  31. ^ Branch, Legislative Services (20 July 2005). "Civil Marriage Act". Justice Laws Act. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  32. ^ Branch, Legislative Services (1985). "Canadian Human Rights Act". Justice Laws Website. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  33. ^ "Gay Marriage Around the World". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
  34. ^ Crenshaw, Kimberle (1989). "Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine, Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics". University of Chicago Legal Forum. 1989 (1): 139–167.
  35. ^ a b Coston, Bethany M.; Kimmel, Michael (19 March 2012). "Seeing Privilege Where It Isn't: Marginalized Masculinities and the Intersectionality of Privilege". Journal of Social Issues. 68 (1): 97–111. doi:10.1111/j.1540-4560.2011.01738.x.
  36. ^ Allen, Brenda. Difference Matters (2nd ed.). p. 15.
  37. ^ Gutiérrez y Muhs, Gabriella. (2012). Presumed Incompetent : the Intersections of Race and Class for Women in Academia. Niemann, Yolanda Flores., González, Carmen G., Harris, Angela P. Utah: Utah State University Press. pp. 29–39. ISBN 9780874218701. OCLC 843635973.
  38. ^ a b Voltmer, Amy, author. Understanding Intersectionality through Subjective Experiences of Privilege and Oppression. ISBN 9780438047501. OCLC 1089398027. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  39. ^ a b Blum, Lawrence (2008). "'White privilege': A mild critique" (PDF). Theory and Research in Education. 6 (3): 309–321. doi:10.1177/1477878508095586. S2CID 144471761. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  40. ^ Monahan, Michael J. (2014). "The concept of privilege: a critical appraisal". South African Journal of Philosophy. 3 (1): 73–83. doi:10.1080/02580136.2014.892681. eISSN 2073-4867. ISSN 0258-0136. S2CID 145358447.
  41. ^ Cooley, Erin; Brown-Iannuzzi, Jazmin (29 April 2019). "Complex intersections of race and class: Among social liberals, learning about White privilege reduces sympathy, increases blame, and decreases external attributions for White people struggling with poverty". Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. 148 (12): 2218–2228. doi:10.1037/xge0000605. PMID 31033321. S2CID 139104272.

social, privilege, theory, special, advantage, entitlement, which, benefits, person, often, detriment, others, privileged, groups, advantaged, based, education, social, class, caste, height, weight, nationality, geographic, location, disability, ethnic, racial. Social privilege is a theory of special advantage or entitlement which benefits one person often to the detriment of others Privileged groups can be advantaged based on education social class caste age height weight nationality geographic location disability ethnic or racial category gender gender identity neurology sexual orientation physical attractiveness religion and other differentiating factors 1 2 It is generally considered to be a theoretical concept used in a variety of subjects and often linked to social inequality 2 Privilege is also linked to social and cultural forms of power 2 It began as an academic concept but has since been invoked more widely outside of academia 3 This subject is based on the interactions of different forms of privilege within certain situations 4 Furthermore it must be understood as the inverse of social inequality in that it focuses on how power structures in society aid societally privileged people as opposed to how those structures oppress others 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Writings of W E B Du Bois 1 2 Codification of the concept 2 Overview 3 Awareness of privilege 3 1 Examples of forms of privilege 3 1 1 Educational racism 3 1 2 Heterosexual privilege 4 Intersectionality 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 Further reading 8 ReferencesHistory EditWritings of W E B Du Bois Edit W E B Du Bois the author of The Souls of Black Folk 1903 Arguably the history of privilege as a concept dates back to American sociologist and historian W E B Du Bois s 1903 book The Souls of Black Folk Here he wrote that although African Americans were observant of white Americans and conscious of racial discrimination white Americans did not think much about African Americans nor about the effects of racial discrimination 5 6 7 In 1935 Du Bois wrote about what he called the wages of whiteness held by white Americans He wrote that these included courtesy and deference unimpeded admittance to all public functions lenient treatment in court and access to the best schools 8 Codification of the concept Edit Early concepts that would lead to the term White Privilege were developed by the Weather Underground in the 1960s 9 10 In 1988 American feminist and anti racism activist Peggy McIntosh published White Privilege and Male Privilege A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences through Work in Women s Studies Here McIntosh documented forty six privileges which she as a white person experienced in the United States As an example I can be sure that if I need legal or medical help my race will not work against me and I do not have to educate my children to be aware of systemic racism for their own daily physical protection McIntosh described white privilege as an invisible package of unearned assets which white people do not want to acknowledge and which leads to them being confident comfortable and oblivious about racial issues while non white people become unconfident uncomfortable and alienated 11 McIntosh s essay has been credited for stimulating academic interest in privilege which has been extensively studied in the decades since 12 Overview EditHistorically academic study of social inequality focused mainly on the ways in which minority groups were discriminated against and ignored the privileges accorded to dominant social groups That changed in the late 1980s when researchers began studying the concept of privilege 12 Privilege as understood and described by researchers is a function of multiple variables of varying importance such as race age gender sexual orientation gender identity neurology citizenship religion physical ability health level of education and others Race and gender tend to have the highest impacts given that one is born with these characteristics and they are immediately visible However religion sexuality and physical ability are also highly relevant 4 Some such as social class are relatively stable and others such as age wealth religion and attractiveness will or may change over time 13 Some attributes of privilege are at least partly determined by the individual such as level of education whereas others such as race or class background are entirely involuntary American sociologist Michael S Kimmel uses the metaphor of a wind to explain the concept He explains that when you walk into the wind you have to struggle for each step that you take When you walk with the wind you don t feel the wind at all but you still move faster than you would otherwise The wind is social privilege and if it flows with you it simply propels you forward with little effort of your own 4 In the context of the theory privileged people are considered to be the norm and as such gain invisibility and ease in society with others being cast as inferior variants 14 Privileged people see themselves reflected throughout society both in mass media and face to face in their encounters with teachers workplace managers and other authorities which researchers argue leads to a sense of entitlement and the assumption that the privileged person will succeed in life as well as protecting the privileged person from worry that they may face discrimination from people in positions of authority 15 Awareness of privilege EditSome academics such as Peggy McIntosh highlight a pattern where those who benefit from a type of privilege are unwilling to acknowledge it 16 17 18 The argument may follow that such a denial constitutes a further injustice against those who do not benefit from the same form of privilege Derald Wing Sue has referred to such denial as a form of microaggression or microinvalidation that negates the experiences of people who don t have privilege and minimizes the impediments they face 19 McIntosh wrote that most people are reluctant to acknowledge their privilege and instead look for ways to justify or minimize the effects of privilege stating that their privilege was fully earned They justify this by acknowledging the acts of individuals of unearned dominance but deny that privilege is institutionalized as well as embedded throughout our society She wrote that those who believe privilege is systemic may nonetheless deny having personally benefited from it and may oppose efforts to dismantle it 11 According to researchers who privileged individuals resist acknowledging their privileges because doing so would require them to acknowledge that whatever success they have achieved did not result solely through their own efforts Instead it was partly due to a system that has developed to support them 19 The concept of privilege calls into question the idea that society is a meritocracy which researchers who have argued is particularly unsettling for Americans for whom belief that they live in a meritocracy is a deeply held cultural value and one that researchers commonly characterize as a myth 14 20 21 22 In The Gendered Society Michael Kimmel wrote that when people at all levels of privilege do not feel personally powerful arguments that they have benefited from unearned advantages seem unpersuasive 21 further explanation needed Examples of forms of privilege Edit Educational racism Edit Racism is the belief that groups of humans possess different behavioral traits corresponding to physical appearance and can be divided based on the superiority of one race over another This can result in particular ethnic and cultural groups having privileged access to a multitude of resources and opportunities including education and work positions Educational racism has been entrenched in American society since the creation of the United States of America A system of laws in the 18th and 19th century known as the Black Codes criminalized the access to education for black people Until the introduction of the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and the Civil Rights Act of 1866 seeking out an education was punishable by the law for them This thus served to keep African Americans illiterate and only value them as a workforce However even after these institutional and legal changes African Americans were still targeted by educational racism in the form of school segregation in the United States In the 20th century the fight against educational racism reached its climax with the landmark Supreme Court case Brown v Board of Education 23 Educational racism also took other forms throughout history such as the creation of Canadian Indian residential school system in 1831 which forcefully integrated indigenous children into schools aimed at erasing their ethnic linguistic and cultural specificities in order to assimilate them into a white settler society Until the last residential school closed in 1996 Canada had an educational system which specifically harmed and targeted indigenous children An estimated 6 000 children died under that system 24 Nowadays the opportunity gap pinpoints how educational racism is present in societies The term refers to the ways in which race ethnicity socioeconomic status English proficiency community wealth familial situations or other factors contribute to or perpetuate lower educational aspirations achievement and attainment for certain groups of students 25 In other words it is the disparity in access to quality schools and the resources needed for all children to be academically successful 26 Concretely this can be seen in the United States by considering how according to the Schott Foundation s Opportunity to Learn Index students from historically disadvantaged families have just a 51 percent Opportunity to Learn when compared to White non Latino students 26 According to McKinley et al Students of color are pushed toward academic failure and continued social disenfranchisement Racist policies and beliefs in part explain why children and young adults from racially marginalized groups fail to achieve academically at the same rate as their White peers 27 Heterosexual privilege Edit Heterosexual privilege can be defined as the rights and unearned advantages bestowed on heterosexuals in society 28 There are both institutional and cultural forces encouraging heterosexuality in society 28 Sexual orientation is a repeated romantic sexual or emotional attraction to one or multiple genders There are a variety of categories including heterosexual gay lesbian and bisexual 29 Heterosexual is considered the normative form of sexual orientation 1 Heterosexual privilege is based in the existence of homophobia in society particularly at the individual level Between 2014 and 2018 849 sexual orientation related hate crimes were committed in Canada 30 Despite the fact that Canada legalized same sex marriage in 2005 and has enshrined the protection of the human rights of all people of all sexual orientations there is still societal bias against those who do not conform to heterosexuality 31 32 Beyond this institutions such as marriage stop homosexual partners from accessing each other s health insurance tax benefits or adopting a child together 28 Same sex marriage is legal in only 27 countries mostly in the northern hemisphere 33 This results in an inability for non heterosexual couples to benefit from the institutional structures that are based on heterosexuality resulting in privilege for those who are heterosexual Intersectionality EditPrivilege theory argues that each individual is embedded in a matrix of categories and contexts and will be in some ways privileged and other ways disadvantaged with privileged attributes lessening disadvantage and membership in a disadvantaged group lessening the benefits of privilege 17 This can be further supported by the idea of intersectionality which was coined by Kimberle Crenshaw in 1989 34 When applying intersectionality to the concept of social privilege it can be understood as the way one form of privilege can be mitigated by other areas in which a person lacks privilege for example a black man who has male privilege but no white privilege 35 It is also argued that members of privileged social identity groups often don t recognize their advantages 36 Intersections of forms of identity can either enhance privilege or decrease its effects 37 Psychological analysis has found that people tend to frame their lives on different elements of their identity and therefore frame their lives through the privilege they do or do not have 38 However this analysis also found that this framing was stronger amongst certain nationalities suggesting that identity and privilege may be more central in certain countries 38 Often people construct themselves in relation to the majority so ties to identity and therefore degrees of privilege can be stronger for more marginalized groups It is important to note that forms of privilege one might have can actually be decreased by the presence of other factors For example the feminization of a gay man may reduce his male privilege in addition to already lacking heterosexual privilege 35 When acknowledging privilege multifaceted situations must be understood individually Privilege is a nuanced notion and an intersectional understanding helps bridge gaps in the original analysis Criticism EditThe concept of privilege has been criticized for ignoring relative differences among groups For example Lawrence Blum argued that in American culture there are status differences among Chinese Japanese Indians Koreans and Cambodians and among African Americans black immigrants from the Caribbean and black immigrants from Africa 39 Blum agreed that privilege exists and is systemic yet nonetheless criticized the label itself saying that the word privilege implies luxuries rather than rights and arguing that some benefits of privilege such as unimpeded access to education and housing would be better understood as rights Blum suggested that privilege theory should distinguish between spared injustice and unjust enrichment as some effects of being privileged are the former and others the latter Blum also argued that privilege can end up homogenising both privileged and non privileged groups when in fact it needs to take account the role of interacting effects and an individual s multiple group identities 39 White privilege Michael Monahan argued would be more accurately described as the advantages gained by whites through historical disenfranchisement of non whites rather than something that gives whites privilege above and beyond normal human status 40 Psychologist Erin Cooley reported in a study published in 2019 that reading about white privilege decreased social liberals sympathy for poor whites and increased their will to punish blame but did not increase their sympathy for poor blacks 41 See also EditAbleism Body privilege Caste Christian privilege First World privilege Horizontal inequality Ingroups and outgroups Male privilege Nobility Social justiceFurther reading EditPhillips L Taylor Lowery Brian S 2020 I ain t no fortunate one On the motivated denial of class privilege Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 119 6 1403 1422 doi 10 1037 pspi0000240 PMID 32551742 Rohlinger Deana A 2010 Privilege In Ritzer G Ryan J M eds The Concise Encyclopedia of Sociology John Wiley amp Sons pp 473 474 ISBN 978 1 44 439264 7 References Edit a b Black Linda L Stone David 2005 Expanding the Definition of Privilege The Concept of Social Privilege Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development 33 4 243 255 doi 10 1002 j 2161 1912 2005 tb00020 x a b c Twine France Winddance 2013 Geographies of Privilege Routledge pp 8 10 ISBN 978 0415519618 Freeman Hadley 5 June 2013 Check your privilege Whatever that means The Guardian Retrieved 2 November 2018 a b c d S Kimmel Michael 17 April 2018 Kimmel Michael S Ferber Abby L eds privilege A Reader 4 ed Fourth Edition Boulder CO Westview Press 2016 Revised edition of Privilege 2014 Routledge pp 1 11 doi 10 4324 9780429494802 ISBN 9780429494802 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Sullivan Shannon 2006 Revealing Whiteness The Unconscious Habits of Racial Privilege Indiana University Press pp 121 123 ISBN 978 0253218483 Reiland Rabaka 2007 W E B Du Bois and the Problems of the Twenty First Century An Essay on Africana Critical Theory Lexington Books p 3 ISBN 978 0739116821 Appelrouth Scott 2007 Classical and Contemporary Sociological Theory Text and Readings 304 305 SAGE Publications ISBN 978 0761927938 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Kincheloe Joe L 2008 Critical Pedagogy Primer Peter Lang International Academic Publishers pp 60 62 ISBN 978 1433101823 Christensen Mark 2010 Acid Christ Ken Kesey LSD and the Politics of Ecstasy IPG p 264 Sine Peter 1995 The Sixties Wayne State University Press p 222 a b Kimmel Michael S 2009 Privilege A Reader Westview Press pp 1 5 13 26 ISBN 978 0813344263 a b O Brien Jodi A 2008 Encyclopedia of Gender and Society SAGE Publications p 418 ISBN 978 1412909167 Sweet Holly Barlow 2012 Gender in the Therapy Hour Voices of Female Clinicians Working with Men The Routledge Series on Counseling and Psychotherapy with Boys and Men Routledge p 71 ISBN 978 0415885515 a b Case Kim 2013 Deconstructing Privilege Teaching and Learning as Allies in the Classroom Routledge pp 63 64 ISBN 978 0415641463 Sorrells Kathryn 2012 Intercultural Communication Globalization and Social Justice SAGE Publications pp 63 ISBN 978 1412927444 McIntosh Peggy 4 July 2019 White Privilege Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack 1989 1 On Privilege Fraudulence and Teaching as Learning Routledge pp 29 34 doi 10 4324 9781351133791 4 ISBN 9781351133791 S2CID 199169416 a b Garnets Linda 2002 Psychological Perspectives on Lesbian Gay and Bisexual Experiences Columbia University Press p 391 ISBN 978 0231124133 Carter Robert T 2004 Handbook of Racial Cultural Psychology and Counseling Training and Practice Wiley p 432 ISBN 978 0471386292 a b Sue Derald Wing 2010 Microaggressions in Everyday Life Race Gender and Sexual Orientation Wiley pp 37 39 ISBN 978 0470491409 Khan Shamus Rahman 2012 Privilege The Making of an Adolescent Elite at St Paul s School Princeton Studies in Cultural Sociology Princeton University Press pp 107 108 ISBN 978 0691156231 a b Halley Jean 2011 Seeing White An Introduction to White Privilege and Race Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 67 191 ISBN 978 1442203075 Jackson Yolanda Kaye 2006 Encyclopedia of Multicultural Psychology SAGE Publications p 471 ISBN 9781452265568 Bond Helen 2013 Racism in Education Sociology of Education An A to Z Guide SAGE Publications Inc pp 640 643 doi 10 4135 9781452276151 ISBN 9781452205052 retrieved 21 August 2019 Residential Schools in Canada The Canadian Encyclopedia www thecanadianencyclopedia ca Retrieved 21 August 2019 Partnership Great Schools 15 May 2013 Opportunity Gap Definition The Glossary of Education Reform Retrieved 20 August 2019 a b Opportunity Gap Talking Points Schott Foundation for Public Education schottfoundation org Retrieved 20 August 2019 Bryan McKinley Jones Brayboy Angelina E Castagno and Emma Maughan Review of Research in Education Vol 31 Difference Diversity and Distinctiveness in Education and Learning 2007 pp 159 194 a b c Williford Beth 2009 Heterosexual Privilege Encyclopedia of Gender and Society SAGE Publications Inc doi 10 4135 9781412964517 n208 ISBN 9781412909167 retrieved 20 August 2019 Answers to Your Questions For a Better Understanding of Sexual Orientation and Homosexuality American Psychological Association Retrieved 20 August 2019 Police reported hate crime by type of motivation Canada selected police services Statistics Canada 8 December 2014 Retrieved 20 August 2019 Branch Legislative Services 20 July 2005 Civil Marriage Act Justice Laws Act Retrieved 20 August 2019 Branch Legislative Services 1985 Canadian Human Rights Act Justice Laws Website Retrieved 20 August 2019 Gay Marriage Around the World Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project Retrieved 19 May 2019 Crenshaw Kimberle 1989 Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics University of Chicago Legal Forum 1989 1 139 167 a b Coston Bethany M Kimmel Michael 19 March 2012 Seeing Privilege Where It Isn t Marginalized Masculinities and the Intersectionality of Privilege Journal of Social Issues 68 1 97 111 doi 10 1111 j 1540 4560 2011 01738 x Allen Brenda Difference Matters 2nd ed p 15 Gutierrez y Muhs Gabriella 2012 Presumed Incompetent the Intersections of Race and Class for Women in Academia Niemann Yolanda Flores Gonzalez Carmen G Harris Angela P Utah Utah State University Press pp 29 39 ISBN 9780874218701 OCLC 843635973 a b Voltmer Amy author Understanding Intersectionality through Subjective Experiences of Privilege and Oppression ISBN 9780438047501 OCLC 1089398027 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Blum Lawrence 2008 White privilege A mild critique PDF Theory and Research in Education 6 3 309 321 doi 10 1177 1477878508095586 S2CID 144471761 Retrieved 23 October 2014 Monahan Michael J 2014 The concept of privilege a critical appraisal South African Journal of Philosophy 3 1 73 83 doi 10 1080 02580136 2014 892681 eISSN 2073 4867 ISSN 0258 0136 S2CID 145358447 Cooley Erin Brown Iannuzzi Jazmin 29 April 2019 Complex intersections of race and class Among social liberals learning about White privilege reduces sympathy increases blame and decreases external attributions for White people struggling with poverty Journal of Experimental Psychology General 148 12 2218 2228 doi 10 1037 xge0000605 PMID 31033321 S2CID 139104272 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social privilege amp oldid 1132061736, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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