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Do middle-class students perceive poor women and poor men differently?

Authors :
Cozzarelli, Catherine
Tagler, Michael J.
Wilkinson, Anna V.
Source :
Sex Roles: A Journal of Research. Dec, 2002, p519, 11 p.
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

In this study, we examined attitudes toward poor women, stereotypes about them, attributions for their poverty, and whether these thoughts and feelings differ from those about poor men. In our Midwestern college students sample (n = 206), attitudes toward poor women were significantly more positive than attitudes toward poor men. In addition, stereotypes of poor women were both more positive and more consistent with gender stereotypes than were those of poor men. Participants endorsed internal attributions for the poverty of both women and men more strongly than external or cultural attributions. However, the content of these attributions was different for the two target groups. Poor women were held responsible for nontraditional familial and reproductive patterns, whereas poor men were held responsible for lack of initiative and self-improvement. For poor men, all types of attributions included references to ability or willingness to work. The three types of attributions were more conceptually distinct for p oor women. KEY WORDS: poverty; gender; attitudes.

Details

ISSN :
03600025
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Sex Roles: A Journal of Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.98125308