Focuses on a study that examined why so many women declare
themselves personally exempt from discrimination. Researcher Diana
Cordova; Why women often don't perceive personal discrimination; The need
for aggregated data to see the problem.
By
PT Staff, published on July 01, 1994
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
"Sure, women are victims of gender discrimination, but not me," say
subscribers to what psychologists call the denial of personal
disadvantage.
Take the study, done in Boston in the 1980s, of 182 men and 163
women of comparable age, education, training, and occupational level.
Comparable in every way--except that the women earned significantly less
on average than the men, and most acknowledged sex discrimination as a
serious problem. Yet, only 13 women felt they and all women had been
shortchanged.
Why do so many women declare themselves personally exempt from
discrimination? After reviewing decades of research on the phenomenon,
psychologists at the University of Michigan and Smith College offer some
answers.
Most women typically hear about gender discrimination in their
workplace through word of mouth or on a case-by-case basis, observes
Diana Cordova, Ph.D., of Michigan's Institute for Social Research. As a
result, they often don't perceive a general problem. "But if women were
presented with information about promotions and salary from 10 different
departments, they couldn't help but see patterns emerging."
There are emotional as well as cognitive reasons. Some women remain
blind to personal discrimination because they ant to believe they are
special, exempt from the law averages, and that they live in a just
world. Or, they don't want to think of their bosses and coworkers as
villains.
But denial has its price. Failure to recognize a problem means
steps won't be taken to ameliorate it. People need aggregated data so
they can see discrimination if there is a problem.
ILLUSTRATION
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