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Blaming minorities during public health crises: post-COVID-19 substantive and methodological reflections from the UK

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posted on 2024-04-19, 09:54 authored by Lauren McLarenLauren McLaren, Panayiota Tsatsou, Yimei Zhu

Using an original survey fielded during the COVID-19 pandemic, this paper contributes to understanding the phenomenon of blaming minorities during health crises and public perceptions of minorities more generally. We pose direct and indirect (split-sample) survey questions that gauge explicit blame of minorities, and potential implicit blame of particular groups and intergroup bias. Findings reveal that significant numbers tend to explicitly blame minorities for the spread of COVID-19; when asked about behaviors of the UK’s two largest religious minority groups – Muslims and Hindus – clear majorities blame these groups, with smaller percentages appearing to blame the country’s dominant ingroup. We test hypotheses drawn from theories of perceived threat, locus of control and authoritarianism: blaming minorities is expected to be associated with COVID-19-related (disease) threat, generally low sense of personal control, concern about the country’s lack of control over COVID-19, and general need for social conformity.

Funding

Funding for the public opinion survey used in this project was provided by the University of Leicester College of Social Sciences Research Development Fund.

History

Author affiliation

College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities/History, Politics & Int'l Relations

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Ethnic and Racial Studies

Publisher

Taylor & Francis (Routledge)

issn

0141-9870

eissn

1466-4356

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-04-19

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Lauren McLaren

Deposit date

2024-04-16

Rights Retention Statement

  • No

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