{"corpus_id":8678150,"paper_sha":"6d0513919e67182c6cfc617f2e6a4a0ba813ddf5","doi":"10.1177/1088868309352179","arxiv_id":null,"pmid":20018983,"pmcid":null,"mag_id":2101366013,"dblp_id":null,"acl_id":null,"title":"Why Don’t We Practice What We Preach? A Meta-Analytic Review of Religious Racism","year":2010,"publication_date":"2010-02-01","venue":"Personality and Social Psychology Review","journal":{"name":"Personality and Social Psychology Review","pages":"126 - 139","volume":"14"},"journal_issn":null,"journal_title":null,"publication_types":["MetaAnalysis","JournalArticle","Review"],"pubmed_pub_types":["Journal Article","Meta-Analysis"],"s2_fields_of_study":["Sociology","Medicine","Political Science"],"reference_count":114,"citation_count":384,"influential_citation_count":19,"is_open_access":false,"arxiv_categories":null,"arxiv_license":null,"arxiv_journal_ref":null,"mesh_headings":[{"d":"Altruism","mj":false,"ui":"D000533"},{"d":"Civil Rights","mj":true,"ui":"D002961"},{"d":"Cultural Diversity","mj":false,"ui":"D018864"},{"d":"Culture","mj":false,"ui":"D003469"},{"d":"Humans","mj":false,"ui":"D006801"},{"d":"Motivation","mj":false,"ui":"D009042"},{"d":"Prejudice","mj":true,"ui":"D011287"},{"d":"Religion and Psychology","mj":true,"ui":"D012069"},{"d":"Social Conformity","mj":false,"ui":"D012925"},{"d":"Social Desirability","mj":false,"ui":"D012928"},{"d":"Social Identification","mj":false,"ui":"D012933"},{"d":"Social Values","mj":false,"ui":"D012945"},{"d":"United States","mj":false,"ui":"D014481"}],"chemicals":null,"comments_corrections":null,"source_flags":5,"s2_open_access_pdf_url":null,"s2_open_access_landing_url":null,"s2_open_access_license":null,"s2_open_access_status":null,"pmc_open_access_pdf_url":null,"pmc_open_access_landing_url":null,"pmc_open_access_license":null,"pmc_open_access_status":null,"unpaywall_open_access_pdf_url":null,"unpaywall_open_access_landing_url":null,"unpaywall_open_access_license":null,"unpaywall_open_access_status":null,"abstract":"A meta-analytic review of past research evaluated the link between religiosity and racism in the United States since the Civil Rights Act. Religious racism partly reflects intergroup dynamics. That is, a strong religious in-group identity was associated with derogation of racial out-groups. Other races might be treated as out-groups because religion is practiced largely within race, because training in a religious in-group identity promotes general ethnocentrism, and because different others appear to be in competition for resources. In addition, religious racism is tied to basic life values of social conformity and respect for tradition. In support, individuals who were religious for reasons of conformity and tradition expressed racism that declined in recent years with the decreased societal acceptance of overt racial discrimination. The authors failed to find that racial tolerance arises from humanitarian values, consistent with the idea that religious humanitarianism is largely expressed to in-group members. Only religious agnostics were racially tolerant.","claims":[{"public_id":"cl_fd4faf9eccda2b883ba0819818ac1db5","status":"active","text":"Only religious agnostics were racially tolerant.","confidence":0.94,"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/claims/cl_fd4faf9eccda2b883ba0819818ac1db5"},{"public_id":"cl_437277e010dad2377e831eaa7cd7f92a","status":"active","text":"Racial tolerance does not arise from humanitarian values in the reviewed evidence, consistent with humanitarianism being expressed mainly toward in-group members.","confidence":0.86,"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/claims/cl_437277e010dad2377e831eaa7cd7f92a"},{"public_id":"cl_65077b958864497a0f98a1fe5d625754","status":"active","text":"Religiosity linked to conformity and tradition is associated with racism, and that expression of racism has declined in recent years with reduced societal acceptance of overt racial discrimination.","confidence":0.92,"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/claims/cl_65077b958864497a0f98a1fe5d625754"},{"public_id":"cl_13f4db06f5da32d90827588e2d61f9b9","status":"active","text":"Strong religious in-group identity is associated with derogation of racial out-groups.","confidence":0.97,"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/claims/cl_13f4db06f5da32d90827588e2d61f9b9"}],"concepts":[{"public_id":"co_40d9d03104b8da6b0bb1def333980fd8","status":"active","name":"religious racism","description":"Racist attitudes or behavior associated with religious identification and practice.","types":["phenomenon"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_40d9d03104b8da6b0bb1def333980fd8"},{"public_id":"co_558ab6777516e4806ee0b93c601b151d","status":"active","name":"social conformity","description":"A value orientation favoring adherence to social norms and expectations.","types":["value orientation"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_558ab6777516e4806ee0b93c601b151d"},{"public_id":"co_601676a4e86b08f967cbb3cd0222bbe9","status":"active","name":"intergroup dynamics","description":"Processes arising from interactions and comparisons between social groups.","types":["social process"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_601676a4e86b08f967cbb3cd0222bbe9"},{"public_id":"co_6481a3047bc71dbc27fcfacbf2470653","status":"active","name":"racial tolerance","description":"Acceptance of people across racial groups without prejudice.","types":["outcome"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_6481a3047bc71dbc27fcfacbf2470653"},{"public_id":"co_8f222de437defec0359a292a96d293f1","status":"active","name":"religious agnostics","description":"Individuals who identify as agnostic rather than holding a firm religious belief.","types":["group"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_8f222de437defec0359a292a96d293f1"},{"public_id":"co_9ed810992f88edb11118731f7c86049a","status":"active","name":"in-group members","description":"People belonging to one's own social or religious group.","types":["social group"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_9ed810992f88edb11118731f7c86049a"},{"public_id":"co_9fcccaab009026ae3f15e527c7e2acc8","status":"active","name":"respect for tradition","description":"A value orientation favoring established customs and traditional practices.","types":["value orientation"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_9fcccaab009026ae3f15e527c7e2acc8"},{"public_id":"co_acadd500a3e040244ce0157d4e40b1b0","status":"active","name":"racial out-groups","description":"Racial groups viewed as outside one's own group and subject to derogation.","types":["social group"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_acadd500a3e040244ce0157d4e40b1b0"},{"public_id":"co_bfd7b7216953277a75af91734239caa8","status":"active","name":"humanitarian values","description":"Values centered on concern for others and humane treatment.","types":["value orientation"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_bfd7b7216953277a75af91734239caa8"},{"public_id":"co_e25b79b10eaecf1c7e98dab2476c05a5","status":"active","name":"religious in-group identity","description":"Identification with one's own religious group as an in-group.","types":["social identity"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_e25b79b10eaecf1c7e98dab2476c05a5"},{"public_id":"co_feec2e85b8f1cc1a2f0870dbe1960a80","status":"active","name":"religiosity","description":"The degree of religious belief, commitment, or practice.","types":["attribute"],"aliases":[],"contributors":[{"id":1,"public_id":"12632b8b5f","public_label":"Anonymous (12632b8b5f)","roles":["extraction"],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/u/12632b8b5f"}],"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/concepts/co_feec2e85b8f1cc1a2f0870dbe1960a80"}],"external_ids":{"DOI":"10.1177/1088868309352179","ArXiv":null,"PubMed":20018983,"PubMedCentral":null,"MAG":2101366013,"DBLP":null,"ACL":null},"open_access":{"is_open_access":false,"pdf_url":null,"landing_url":"https://sah.borca.ai/papers/8678150","source":null,"pdf_url_source":null,"license":null,"reason":"pdf_url_not_indexed"},"reference_availability":{"status":"available","references_indexed":true,"full_text_available":false,"full_text_source":null,"count_basis":"semantic_scholar_metadata","extraction_status":"not_applicable","reason":null},"source":{"provider":"episteme2","base_corpus":"semantic_scholar_dump","freshness_mode":"unknown","basis":["semantic_scholar_metadata","postgres_metadata"],"limits":["paper metadata is based on indexed upstream scholarly datasets","claims and concepts are available only for extracted papers","absence of claims or concepts means no extracted graph data is available in this response"],"status":"available","degraded":false,"degraded_reasons":[],"diagnostics":{"status":"available","degraded":false,"degraded_reasons":[],"metadata_status":"available","graph_status":"available","abstract_status":"available"},"source_flags":5},"paper_id":631091,"paper_uid":"6a68548f-532f-4991-90a0-1813c6fa9625","canonical_identity":{"paper_id":631091,"paper_uid":"6a68548f-532f-4991-90a0-1813c6fa9625","identity_status":"available","lookup_basis":"semantic_scholar_external_id","compatibility_path":"corpus_id"},"url":"https://sah.borca.ai/papers/8678150"}