Prejudice in the former Soviet Union |
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Authors: | Joseph Hraba Carolyn S. Dunham Sergey Tumanov Louk Hagendoorn |
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Affiliation: | 1. Professor of Sociology , Iowa State University of Science and Technology , 107 East Hall, Ames, IA, 50011–1070, USA;2. Doctoral candidate in Sociology , Iowa State University;3. Director of the Center for Sociological Studies , Moscow State University;4. Professor of Social Sciences , University of Utrecht |
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Abstract: | Research in the United States and Europe has focused on the prejudice of majority groups towards minority groups, the implication somehow being that majority groups were more prejudiced than minority groups. In the former Soviet Union, ethnic environments were more complex; the same ethnic group could be a majority in one region but a minority in others. Using a sample of 1,459 first‐ and fourth‐year university students from eight regions of the former USSR, this study focuses on Russian, Tatar and Ukrainian respondents (n = 821) to test the hypothesis that the status of an ethnic group (majority/minority) or in‐group bias explains members’ prejudice. According to in‐group bias, all ethnic groups are equally prejudiced, minority and majority alike, whereas group status posits that groups in a majority position are more prejudiced. Findings show that group status has greater impact on prejudice than does in‐group bias. This applies, however, only to Russians. Interpretations of the findings rest on Soviet history and the rise of nationalism during the breakup of the Soviet Union. |
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Keywords: | Prejudice Soviet Union Russians Tatars and Ukrainians |
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