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People Judge Discrimination Against Women More Harshly Than Discrimination Against Men – Does Statistical Fairness Discrimination Explain Why?

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posted on 2022-04-13, 23:41 authored by Eberhard FeessEberhard Feess, Jan FeldJan Feld, S Noy
Previous research has shown that people care less about men than about women who are left behind. We show that this finding extends to the domain of labor market discrimination: In identical scenarios, people judge discrimination against women more morally bad than discrimination against men. This result holds in a representative sample of the US population and in a larger but not representative sample of Amazon Mechanical Turk (Mturk) respondents. We test if this gender gap is driven by statistical fairness discrimination, a process in which people use the gender of the victim to draw inferences about other characteristics which matter for their fairness judgments. We test this explanation with a survey experiment in which we explicitly hold information about the victim of discrimination constant. Our results provide only mixed support for the statistical fairness discrimination explanation. In our representative sample, we see no meaningful or significant effect of the information treatments. By contrast, in our Mturk sample, we see that providing additional information partly reduces the effect of the victim’s gender on judgment of the discriminator. While people may engage in statistical fairness discrimination, this process is unlikely to be an exhaustive explanation for why discrimination against women is judged as worse.

History

Preferred citation

Feess, E., Feld, J. & Noy, S. (2021). People Judge Discrimination Against Women More Harshly Than Discrimination Against Men – Does Statistical Fairness Discrimination Explain Why? Frontiers in Psychology, 12, 675776-. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.675776

Journal title

Frontiers in Psychology

Volume

12

Publication date

2021-09-20

Pagination

675776

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2021-09-20

ISSN

1664-1078

eISSN

1664-1078

Article number

ARTN 675776

Language

en