qwints
Muse
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2008
- Messages
- 697
This
is markedly different from this
The latter shows you didn't read the study:
As I said, the study demonstrates classism and not racism.
is markedly different from this
My criticism of the study is that the authors are concluding that racism is the only factor at play when it comes to bias against certain names. I don't think the study is rigorous enough to make such a conclusion because there isn't even an attempt to control for social class in terms of the names they used.
The latter shows you didn't read the study:
But, more interestingly for us, there is substantial between-name heterogeneity in social background. African American babies named Kenya or Jamal are affiliated with much higher mothers’ education than African American babies named Latonya or Leroy. Conversely, White babies named Carrie or Neil have lower social background than those named Emily or Geoffrey. This allows for a direct test of the social background hypothesis within our sample: are names associated with a worse social background discriminated against more? In the last row in each gender-race group, we report the rank-order correlation between callback rates and mother’s education. The social background hypothesis predicts a positive correlation. Yet, for all four categories, we find the exact opposite. The p-values indicate that we cannot reject independence at standard significance levels except in the case of African American males where we can almost reject it at the 10 percent level. In summary, this test suggests little evidence that social background drives the extent of discrimination.