Showing posts with label stereotypes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stereotypes. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 October 2019

The Stereotype Of The Narcissistic Only Child Is Widespread — But It’s Wrong





Wherever you fall in a group of siblings, there are plenty of stereotypes about the sort of person you are or will turn out to be. Oldest of the bunch? You’ll be bossy, then. Youngest? Spoilt. Only child? Selfish and narcissistic, of course.

But this last stereotype, at least, can now be put to bed. That’s thanks to new research published in Social Psychological and Personality Science in which Michael Dufner from the University of Leipzig and colleagues found that the cliché, though widespread, is fundamentally inaccurate.



In the first part of the study, the researchers looked at the prevalence of the stereotype. They gave 556 online participants items from the Narcissistic Admiration and Rivalry Questionnaire — “I secretly take pleasure in the failure of my rivals”, for example — and asked them to indicate how much the statements applied to typical only children and, separately, how much they applied to a typical person with at least one sibling. Two different aspects of narcissism were measured: narcissistic admiration, which refers to the narcissistic desire to seek out admiration, attention or flattery, and narcissistic rivalry, which involves demeaning or devaluing others to avoid criticism.

The second part of the study looked at data from the Innovation Sample of the Socio-Economic Panel — a large-scale, nationally representative longitudinal study of private households in Germany. This includes measures of narcissism for 1,810 participants, including 233 without siblings.

The first set of results did indeed indicate that we tend to ascribe higher levels of narcissistic admiration and narcissistic rivalry to only children. But results from the second part of the study seemed to suggest that our stereotyping has no grounding: only children did not actually differ in narcissism levels compared to those with siblings.

The findings may have wider implications, too. Only children, perceived as high in narcissism, may be shunned or experience discrimination from others — even though this perception is based on completely unjustified grounds. “Given this downside, researchers and journalists should refrain from portraying only children as narcissistic,” write the authors.

There are two caveats: firstly, the research was conducted only in Germany, so additional social factors may have impacted the results (the team specifically point out that cultures with higher levels of collectivism — which have a greater focus on the community, rather than the individual — may end up with a different set of results). And the research looked only at grandiose narcissism, characterised by a sense of superiority and domineering behaviour, but not vulnerable narcissism, characterised by introversion and insecurity. Measuring only one form means the research may not be conclusive across the board.

As the results of this research show, stereotypes about birth order are rarely useful in predicting someone’s personality. Though you’d certainly be forgiven for forgetting that the next time you need an excuse to call your older sibling bossy.


Saturday, 14 March 2015

Why are white people expats when the rest of us are immigrants?



In the lexicon of human migration there are still hierarchical words, created with the purpose of putting white people above everyone else. One of those remnants is the word “expat”.



What is an expat? And who is an expat? According to Wikipedia, “an expatriate (often shortened to expat) is a person temporarily or permanently residing in a country other than that of the person’s upbringing. The word comes from the Latin terms ex (‘out of’) and patria (‘country, fatherland’)”.

Defined that way, you should expect that any person going to work outside of his or her country for a period of time would be an expat, regardless of his skin colour or country. But that is not the case in reality; expat is a term reserved exclusively for western white people going to work abroad.

Africans are immigrants. Arabs are immigrants. Asians are immigrants. However, Europeans are expats because they can’t be at the same level as other ethnicities. They are superior. Immigrants is a term set aside for ‘inferior races’.

Don’t take my word for it. The Wall Street Journal, the leading financial information magazine in the world, has a blog dedicated to the life of expats and recently they featured a story ‘Who is an expat, anyway?’. Here are the main conclusions: “Some arrivals are described as expats; others as immigrants; and some simply as migrants. It depends on social class, country of origin and economic status. It’s strange to hear some people in Hong Kong described as expats, but not others. Anyone with roots in a western country is considered an expat … Filipino domestic helpers are just guests, even if they’ve been here for decades. Mandarin-speaking mainland Chinese are rarely regarded as expats … It’s a double standard woven into official policy.”


Is there any space in the development debate for African experts?



The reality is the same in Africa and Europe. Top African professionals going to work in Europe are not considered expats. They are immigrants. Period. “I work for multinational organisations both in the private and public sectors. And being black or coloured doesn’t gain me the term “expat”. I’m a highly qualified immigrant, as they call me, to be politically correct,” says an African migrant worker.

Most white people deny that they enjoy the privileges of a racist system. And why not? But our responsibility is to point out and to deny them these privileges, directly related to an outdated supremacist ideology. If you see those “expats” in Africa, call them immigrants like everyone else. If that hurts their white superiority, they can jump in the air and stay there. The political deconstruction of this outdated worldview must continue.


SOURCE:
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development-professionals-network/2015/mar/13/white-people-expats-immigrants-migration?CMP=share_btn_fb(accessed 14.3.15)

Mawuna Remarque Koutonin is the editor of SiliconAfrica.com, where this blog was first published. Follow @siliconafrica on Twitter.