The Cost of Color: Skin Color, Discrimination, and Health among African-AmericansPosted in Arts, Health/Medicine/Genetics, Media Archive, Social Science, United States on 2015-10-11 17:54Z by Steven |
The Cost of Color: Skin Color, Discrimination, and Health among African-Americans
American Journal of Sociology
Volume 121, Number 2 (September 2015)
pages 396-444
DOI: 10.1086/682162
Ellis P. Monk Jr., Neubauer Family Assistant Professor of Sociology
University of Chicago
In this study, the author uses a nationally representative survey to examine the relationship(s) between skin tone, discrimination, and health among African-Americans. He finds that skin tone is a significant predictor of multiple forms of perceived discrimination (including perceived skin color discrimination from whites and blacks) and, in turn, these forms of perceived discrimination are significant predictors of key health outcomes, such as depression and self-rated mental and physical health. Intraracial health differences related to skin tone (and discrimination) often rival or even exceed disparities between blacks and whites as a whole. The author also finds that self-reported skin tone, conceptualized as a form of embodied social status, is a stronger predictor of perceived discrimination than interviewer-rated skin tone. He discusses the implications of these findings for the study of ethnoracial health disparities and highlights the utility of cognitive and multidimensional approaches to ethnoracial and social inequality.
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