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My collaborators and I show in our experiments that how confident people are of their own worth plays a large role in whether they will engage in morally problematic behavior, how they estimate the moral behavior of other people in their community, whether they tolerate the moral exemplarity of others, and even whether they condemn the behavior of others as immoral. (If you want to avoid the jargon you may want to read instead some media accounts here.) |
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Norms against prejudice provide an interesting window into the workings of everyday morality. More than engaging in traditional sins, many contemporary Americans worry about doing something that would imply sexist or racist attitudes. The moral nature of this threat is revealed both by the guilt and shame reported by individuals who fear that they have violated their own egalitarian values, and by the opprobrium that befalls those suspected of prejudice. The threat of the moral stigma attached to prejudice can hinder effective communication in academic settings, for example when advisers sugarcoat feedback to minority students to avoid feeling racist (Crosby & Monin, 2007). In this context, how do individuals ever gain the confidence to say what's really on their mind? One source of such confidence is their track record as a good egalitarian individuals: For example, experiments show that individuals who have had the opportunity to recruit a woman in one setting (establishing their moral credentials) are more likely to say that another job would be better suited for a man (Monin & Miller, 2001). When it comes to identifying prejudice in others, members of majority groups appear surprisingly eager to take cues from members of targeted groups. Eye-tracking technology makes it possible to record where individuals are looking while witnessing a potentially racist comment, and reveals that their attention is redirected towards a minority bystander if he can hear the comment too (Crosby, Monin, & Richardson, 2007 -- and see the story in Time Magazine). Monin, B., & Miller, D.T. (2001). Moral credentials and the expression of prejudice. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 81(1): 33-43. Effron, D., Cameron, J.S., & Monin, B. (2009). Voting for Obama licenses favoring Whites. In press,Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 45, 590-593. Crosby, J.R., Monin, B., & Richardson, D. (2008). Where do we look during potentially offensive behavior? Psychological Science, 19(3), 226-228. Crosby, J.R., & Monin, B. (2007). Failure to warn: How student race affects warnings of potential academic difficulty. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 43(4), 663-670. |