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Nicole's Father is NOT German! The Immutability of Differences, and the Social Construction of their Moral and Political Salience

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 January 2010

Kristen Renwick Monroe*
Affiliation:
University of California, Irvine
Rose McDermott
Affiliation:
Brown University
*
Please address correspondence to Kristen Monroe.

Abstract

Why are differences so political significant? Too often political science discussions of differences assume they are immutable. The attendant implication is that the political divisions attached to these variations—in religion, ethnicity, race, or any of the other dissimilarities that frequently enter political life—are considered rigid and inflexible. This commentary draws on recent work in moral and social psychology and evolutionary biology to suggest that the critical political factor surrounding differences is not their immutability but rather the moral and political salience we accord such differences. Simple experiments in social identity theory—and a conversation with an incensed 12-year old—demonstrate that the psychological process by which differences between people and groups become deemed ethically and politically relevant is totally socially constructed and hence can be restructured in a fashion that leads to more tolerant treatment of those judged different.

Type
Features
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 2010

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Footnotes

We wish to thank Chloe Lampros-Monroe and Nicole Herbert-Whiting for their insights into social science. We thank Jim Herbert for being “art history” not German.

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