reviewPsychological BulletinJan 1, 2003Closed access

A justification-suppression model of the expression and experience of prejudice.

University of Kansas

PubMed
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Abstract

The authors propose a justification-suppression model (JSM), which characterizes the processes that lead to prejudice expression and the experience of one's own prejudice. They suggest that "genuine" prejudices are not directly expressed but are restrained by beliefs, values, and norms that suppress them. Prejudices are expressed when justifications (e.g., attributions, ideologies, stereotypes) release suppressed prejudices. The same process accounts for which prejudices are accepted into the self-concept The JSM is used to organize the prejudice literature, and many empirical findings are recharacterized as factors affecting suppression or justification, rather than directly affecting genuine prejudice. The…

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1,084
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Prejudice (legal term)
  • Expression (computer science)
  • Ambivalence
  • Social psychology
  • Ideology
  • Attribution
  • Psychology
  • Political science
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
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