Recent orders
Social Bias
Social Bias
Contents
TOC o “1-3” h z u Introduction PAGEREF _Toc380754616 h 1Concepts of prejudice, stereotype and discrimination. PAGEREF _Toc380754617 h 1Difference between Subtle and blatant bias PAGEREF _Toc380754618 h 2Impacts of bias on Individuals PAGEREF _Toc380754619 h 2Strategies used to overcome social biases. PAGEREF _Toc380754620 h 3
IntroductionSocial biases are described as preference toward a particular way of thinking or how something is viewed. To be biased simply means that a person’s attitude or behavior is under the influence of a particular prejudice. Social biases are a problem in the society since one group looks down on another group since that particular group feels better than the other. Social biases affect social judgment, how people view each other and what behaviors’ are expcted.prejudice, stereotypes and discrimination are all forms of social bias that can have a negative impact on ones quality of life. There are claims that social biases can be overcome if a person has the capacity and motivation to change their attitude. Social bias is a common phenomenon in many group interactions and involves a negative evaluation of group.
Concepts of prejudice, stereotype and discrimination.Stereotyping is when a person applies their own cognitive expectancies and associations about a particular group. Prejudice is an emotional response to a person on the basis of the person’s feelings about the particular group. There can be negative prejudgment of groups and its individual members on the basis of their membership. This is an overall attitude that has an influence on emotions and thoughts about a group and the behavior towards the group as well (Diaz, 2011).
A stereotype is a representation of beliefs of personal attributes of the group of people. They are often overgeneralized, inaccurate and resistant to new information. It’s a belief that members of a particular group all have the same characteristics. It basically involves the generalization about the characteristics of members of a group that is typical to other members. As all other forms of bias, stereotype can be positive or negative, accurate or inaccurate. Discrimination on the other hand entails acting on the basis of prejudices and stereotypes hence denying equality in treatment that people desire on these basis. This is the actual positive or negative actions towards the objects of prejudice.
Difference between Subtle and blatant biasSubtle bias is also known as modern prejudice, appears subtly when preferences are made for what is familiar, similar and comfortable. This includes the exaggerating differences of members in out-groups, a feeling of less admiration and less affection for out-group members. A rejection of out-group’s for reasons that are not discriminatory. This form of bias is termed as cool and indirect and its manifestation is in behaviors such as blaming out-groups ,a view of disadvantages of out-group’s as intrinsic features of their essential makeup and a withhold of sympathy and respect. On the other hand Blatant bias is termed as old-fashioned bias and occurs as a result of threats to an ingroup,a struggle for positive group identity ,a comparison between groups and favoritism that is ingroup.This form of discrimination include verbal rejection,avoidance,segregation,physical attack and extermination. Verbal discrimination entails racial slurs, demeaning jokes that are often inappropriate and other verbal methods that may create a hostile environment. Segregation and avoidance include remaining close to in-group members and an exclusion of out-group members. Physically aggressive bias is represented by attack and extermination (Diaz, M. 2011).
Impacts of bias on IndividualsThe social bias have different impacts on the social life of individuals, career as well as where they are living. Discrimination as a form of social bias can be able to create a negative outcome that includes avoidance and hostile atmosphere while bringing different negative behaviors which the biased perceiver may expect. The expectancy effects usually tells how a biased person can interact with out group members, however, the behavior towards the members may solicit an expected negative outcomes. It is therefore true that, both the subtle and blatant forms of bias are capable of impacting the feelings of individuals among their own group and feelings which might be threatened by different out groups. People should then be aware that biased treatment from different groups can change the self-esteem of the individuals.
Racism, sexism and ageism, all these are forms of prejudice which tend to influence or affect the social lives and career of individuals. However, racism is a discrimination which is based on the ethnic background of individuals, even though it has today decreased in the society given that some societies have managed to adopt an attitude which is less tolerant against other forms of discriminations such as blatant. As a result, some racial groups continue experiencing different social bias because of their heritage and hate in organizations (Clark, 2010).
Strategies used to overcome social biases.Many strategies have been used to overcome social biases not only in the society but also in growing organizations. Strategies such as equal opportunity law as well as affirmative action have been used the solutions to this problem. The strategies involve increasing the contact among the inter groups. For example, take a case where the biased people have the capacity along with motivation for the change; it is definitely clear that, the situational goals might contribute to any gaining control of the subtle as a form of bias. The intergroup contact is sometimes significant due to specific circumstances. Individuals members interactions of the socially divergent groups are termed to be constructive when there is equality in status of the groups within the contact situation, common goals, and authority permit for the contact. The concept of intergroup contact increases inter dependence by allowing the group members to be relying on one another with specific shared goals (Clark, 2010).
Reference
Clark, P. (2010). ‘I Don’t Think I’m Biased’ | Teaching Tolerance. Teaching Tolerance. Retrieved October 29, 2012, from http://www.tolerance.org/magazine/number-37-spring-2010/i-don-t-think-i-m-biasedDiaz, M. (2011).Social Bias:sound farmiliar.Retrieved October 29,2012 from http://voices.yahoo.com/social-bias-sound-familiar-8908529.html?cat=72
Social Anxiety Disorder
Social Anxiety Disorder
Student’s Name
Institution
Social Anxiety Disorder
The hypothetical client who is twenty one years of age have been experiencing difficulties in presenting school work projects as well as being part of the public. It has been the case since his early ages of growth to an extent of not being able to express himself to the parents, teachers, the community members as well as the colleagues. The fear of judgment and anxiety tend to be a mess to his well-being and performance thus the urge to seek counseling intervention.
For instance, the individual’s first instance of noting the anxiety was at the age of ten after being involved with an argument with his parent after the act of abandoning the duty chores to go and play with friends. The mother was angry as she thought that he had not even done his homework. However, he had prior completed the assignment before joining the friends. He tried to explain that to the mother but all was not possible as he was just stumbling over words and ended up bursting into a loud yelp. His mother could not understand his reason for crying and ended up punishing him as she thought it was right that he has not attempted the homework. The anxiety builds up to a higher level as he grows and could not even approach an elder person or participate in asking and answering questions in the classroom.
The other fatal instance that the client had a hard time is during the intermediate level education stage where he was supposed to join a discussion group, be an active participant and carry out some presentations in front of the classroom. Each and every time they used to meet he would run out of words, sweat and be even not able to raise or support a point during the group discussion. The members could not cope up with him and he ended up shifting from one group to another now and then. During the presentation the client’s anxiety raises and he ends up sweating, shaking as well as fidgeting in front of the class and ended up earning the group the lowest marks. All the blame could turn on him leading to stress and fear of associating with other people. Now at the tertiary level, the same fear and anxiety persist as the client has to present his project in front of the board of professors who have the question and asses him accordingly. The anxiety has been a struggle hence the impulse to seek mediation as there has been a significant fear of losing an opportunity in future where he will be required to deal with the public.
Diagnosis Social Anxiety Disorder
Rationale for Diagnosis
The hypothetical client meets criteria for Social Anxiety Disorder because he is experiencing anxiety and fear of being judged. The act of stumbling over words and being unable to express himself are also prevalent symptoms of the disorder. While addressing the public, the client sweat, shakes, fidget and lack the energy of standing in front of the crowd also signifies that he is suffering from Social Anxiety Disorder. Also, the act of having difficulties in expression to his parents, teachers as well as colleagues signifies the disorder.
Social and economic inequality
Social and economic inequality
Social and economic inequality can be described as the gap that exists between persons or populations in the allocation of income, wealth or asset. The term social and economic inequality can also refer to dissimilarity among groups and persons, on the other hand can also refer to dissimilarity among nations. The issue surrounding inequality revolves around: impartiality, similarity of upshot, similarity of occasion and life expectancy. Whenever people thin of social dissimilarity, what comes into their minds is the socio economic class. In the society, it is evidenced that, people who have acquired much wealth takes the top echelons of society and enjoy the greatest privileges which are brought to them by their social status and money.
Conversely, those who are poor to not get the opportunity of enjoying such privileges and these people are often marginalized when it comes to social and education services. Social stratification and inequity comes in various forms. For example, in the US, it is noticeable that most of social dealings are mitigated by race and gender; there is an existence of a wide gap between the genders. In spite of the laws that govern pay equity and the growing consciousness of gender prejudice and women’s rights, there is still existence of salary disparities between men and women across wide array of occupations. Socio economic dissimilarity is caused by several non economic factors like racial discrimination and stratification.
Factors such as racial discrimination and stratification in the long run bar the marginalized groups from completely benefiting from social institutions like workforce and education. The economic inequity would be ample cause for concern, but its impact could well be compounded by its social consequences. Rising social inequality in many different domains such as family life, education or civic engagement could magnify the burden of rising poverty for the most vulnerable and sustain the effects of inequity far into the future (André et al 2013).
To take one not entirely hypothetical example, economic inequality could lead to widening gap into education outcomes because rising incomes among affluent families bring new resources to suburban school districts, or because more affluent families bring public schools into higher quality private education, while falling incomes among the poor make it more difficult for them to improve or escape their underfunded public schools. Rising economic inequality might also widen the gap in access to high quality preschool to private college education and to other privately financed educational services, such as tutoring or prep courses for college entrance test (Boulhol, 2013). With so much riding on education; particular access to secure, well paying jobs, it is very clear that the rising educational inequality could have very significant long term effects.
Despite the possibility of these far reaching implications, the rise in economic inequality has received little public attention. This might be because, inequality has risen so gradually over the past 25 years or because changes in inequality are distributed over the entire population and are therefore difficult to perceive in any immediate way. In addition, although inequality is an intuitively meaningful idea, measures of inequality are less familiar to the public than are the indicators used to track other economic phenomena.
Family life and neighborhood are highly salient for immediate well being of the children and for the eventual economic and social status of the next generation. The growing up in a single parent family can marginally but significantly impair school performance, raise the odds of teen pregnancy and criminal involvement and depress future employment and earnings. There is therefore a growing class difference in the incidence of single parents’ families. It is clear that educated women are postponing both marriage and child birth but marry when they already have children while the less educated women are also postponing marriage but not child birth. This leads therefore to the rise in childbirth amongst uneducated women (Bollé, 2009).
Education is another dimension of inequality with transparent importance for the next generation. Over the past three decades, the economic value of education has risen dramatically. High school dropouts are marginalized in every competitive job market and strong cognitive skills and college credentials are increasingly important to economic attainment. Americans have responded to this rising demand for skill by getting more and better education wherever they can. The only question remaining is whether the families at the bottom of the income distribution have the opportunity to improve their educational preparation as effectively as more advantaged groups. Education inequality has its most immediate consequences in the labor market as new workers are sorted into good and .bad jobs (Denisova, 2012).
Given the very long relationship between social and economic status and health, people might expect growing social and economic inequality to be mirrored in the health status of the population. There are many channels through which income might improve health including better material living conditions, access to better medical care and protection from environmental hazards. If inequality in health widens, there maybe long term reciprocal consequences for economic inequality; for just as income can affect health, so health can impact income (Jones, 2007). Illness and inability makes it difficult to hold a job, of course and recent research shows, poor health in childhood leads to lower education and earnings in adulthood.
There is virtually no dimension of social inequality that is unaffected by law and public policy. For example, the divorce laws that affects the formation and well being of single parent families or the legal action driving school finance reform, or public investment in health and environmental protection. If economic and social inequality reduces the political influence of the poor while it improves the wealthy, public policy is likely to shift towards the interest s of upper income constituencies deepening economic and social inequality (Fournier & Garcia, 2013).
There are long standing differences of opinion about the implication of economic inequality for public policy. As inequality rises and the affluent become increasingly capable of purchasing private substitutes for public social provisions like education, health care and retirement pension, they might use their increasing economic and political resources to lobby for reduction in progressive taxation and cut social programs. On the other hand, growing economic inequality might spur more redistributive public policies, if the ranks of the have- nots begin to outnumber the ranks of the haves, and politicians respond to growing constituency of economically frustrated voters by taxing rich and distributing benefits to the poor.
Economic inequality can be reproduced over the generations as families accumulate wealth and bequeath it on to their children. Questions remain about trends in wealth inequality over the last 25 years, but it is clear that racial inequality in wealth is very large (Immervoll & Richardson, 2011).
Poverty inequality is acknowledged as an ethical, political, social and economic importance to human beings according to the World Social Summit. It is necessary that all the primary needs in a family are provided for all to end poverty, by making sure that all the less fortunate can be able to get industrious properties which are; funds, learning and teaching among other skills. Targets were set up by the 24th extraordinary sitting of the Un General Assembly to decrease the proportion of people living in severe poverty by one half by the year 2015. The targets have been consequently approved by the Millennium Summit as Millennium Development Goal 1.
It is essential to discuss about poverty inequality from all angles by supporting human centered advance and asking for the economic empowerment of human beings with extreme poverty from their own complete contribution in all directions regarding social, economical, and political, particularly during the plan and execution of policies that have an effect on the most poorest and less fortunate groups of any community. Additional, an incorporated approach towards poverty suppression necessitates advocating for quality national policies propelled to additional equitable allocation of riches and returns and social protection treatment (Jamet Et al.., 2013).
During the celebrations of the Eradication of Poverty International Day on 17th October, 2006, the UN Secretary General then Kofi Annan said that, “The operation to make poverty past history a central ethical struggle of our age will never remain a task for the few individuals, it must develop into a true calling for the many individuals. I recommend each and every individual to join this fight. United we will make genuine and adequate development towards the finishing of poverty inequalities in our societies in the world” (Jones, 2008).
The ceremony of the Eradication of Poverty International Day started on 17th October 1987 when over a 100,000 individuals gathered at the trocadero in Paris, where the UDHR was signed in 1948, for the honor of the sufferers of intense lack of wealth, aggression and starvation. They claimed that poverty is a contravention of a person’s rights and acknowledged the main reason to come together in making sure that these constitutional rights are appreciated (Jones & Urasawa, 2012). From then, groups of people from all the backgrounds, attitudes and social origins have come together every year on October 17th to refurbish their dedication and to show their cohesion with the less fortunate in the society.
Consequently, the United Nations declaration 47/196 which was adopted on December 22nd, 1992, the General Assembly acknowledged October 17th as Global day for the Poverty Eradication and welcomed all partner Countries to dedicate the day in presenting and encouraging as suitable in the national context, solid activities with the special interest to the eradication of paucity and hardship. The Day recommends the attempt and struggle to survive for the individuals who are less fortunate, and provides an opportunity for them to make their problems heard, and an instant to be familiar with that poor person are the first ones to fight against poverty. The contribution of the less fortunate themselves has been a key element during the Day’s commemoration from its very establishment. The remembrance of this Day also focuses the readiness of persons living in poverty to use their knowledge to assist to the abolition of poverty (Joumard & Londoño 2013).
During the execution of the FDEP (1997-2006), numerous UN extraordinary summits and conferences, which brought about negotiated findings with interests in the national, regional and global measures in reducing poverty levels in our societies? They comprise the UN Millennium Declaration, the Monterrey Consensus of the International Conference on Financing for Development and the 2005 World Summit Findings. On the other hand, the development made in dropping poverty internationally has been irregular with some countries experiencing poverty reductions, while in other several third world countries poverty is always on the rise, specifically the children and ladies in societies (Lewis, 2011).
The 2nd UN DEP between 2008 and 2017, was declared by the UN General Assembly in December 2007, restated that eliminating poverty was the utmost international difficulty that the whole universe faces and a main obligation for maintainable development, specifically for third world countries. Here in the 2nd Decade it aspires at helping, in a well-organized and harmonized manner, the globally recommended development strategies similar to poverty eradication, as well as the Millennium Development Goals.
It maintains the principle of strengthening the good steps in poverty eradication in many states and expanding such steps to assistance individuals globally. The declaration distinguishes the significance of uniting monetary funds for improvement at country and global levels and identifies that continued monetary development hold up by increasing productivity and a favorable atmosphere, together with private venture and entrepreneurship is very important for increasing living costs (Leschke & Jepsen, 2012).
In an example of India, it is being noticed that giving unique act of kindness to the poverty stricken individuals in a community will not work in reducing poverty. An instance is where after a period of over 60 years since Independence and free learning and quota for programmed castes and ethnic groups, the number of persons qualified for the quota advantage has consistently risen. This means that anything that is returned grows (LüBker, 2007). When poverty stricken people are compensated in any way, they are destined to develop. It would be important to recall a Chinese proverb which says, “Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day. Teach a man how to fish and you feed him for a lifetime”.
Less fortunate persons are supposed to be inspired with self-confidence that yes, they will be able to change their lives. This can be accomplished by making them understand that somebody in their current situation has already gained important feats. Poverty stricken individuals are supposed to be given role models they can emulate from them so that they will be able to model their lives in the same direction hence changing their lives completely. They are supposed to be reminded that people come from rags-to-riches, so they will shock us by growing out of poverty in the shortest duration as possible (Sassi et al…, 2009).
Muhammad Yunus from Bangladesh has may be done more in eradicating poverty than anybody else in the whole universe. He established an organization that gives out funds in form of credits to very poor persons who are in need to establish their own businesses. They put people in small grouping to access the loans and also to motivate other member to be more active and work extra harder and it can enhance peer pressure on the loonies to repay their loans on time. The result is Yunus’s bank has a 98 per cent rate of loan repayment better than most banks internationally.
André, C., Garcia, C., Giupponi, G., & Pareliussen, J. (2013). Labour Market, Welfare Reform and Inequality in the United Kingdom.
Boulhol, H. (2013). Improving the Economic Situation of Young People in France.
Bollé, P. (2009). Inequalities and financial globalization: a timely report. International Labour Review. 147.
Denisova, I. (2012). Income Distribution and Poverty in Russia.
Fournier, J. M., & Garcia, C. (2013). Strengthening Social Cohesion in Luxembourg Making Efficiency and Equity Go Hand in Hand.
Immervoll, H., & Richardson, L. (2011). Redistribution Policy and Inequality Reduction in OECD Countries What Has Changed in Two Decades?
Jamet, S., Chalaux, T., & Koen, V. (2013). Labour Market and Social Policies to Foster More Inclusive Growth in Sweden.
Jones, R. (2007). Income Inequality, Poverty and Social Spending in Japan.
Jones, R. (2008). Public Social Spending in Korea in the Context of Rapid Population Ageing.
Jones, R., & URASAWA, S. (2012). Promoting Social Cohesion in Korea.
Joumard, I., & Londoño Vélez, J. (2013). Income Inequality and Poverty in Colombia – Part 1. The Role of the Labour Market.
Lewis, D. (2011). Economic Perspectives on Transport And Equality.
Leschke, J., & Jepsen, M. (2012). Introduction: crisis, policy responses and widening inequalities in the EU. International Labour Review. 151.
LüBker, M. (2007). Inequality and the demand for redistribution: are the assumptions of the new growth theory valid? Socio-Economic Review. 5.
Sassi, F., Cecchini, M., Lauer, J., & Chisholm, D. (2009). Improving Lifestyles, Tackling Obesity: The Health and Economic Impact of Prevention Strategies.
