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Journal ArticleDOI

Status organizing processes

Joseph Berger, +2 more
- 01 Aug 1980 - 
- Vol. 6, Iss: 1, pp 479-508
TLDR
A status organizing process is any process in which evaluations of and beliefs about the characteristics of actors become the basis of observable inequalities in face-to-face social interaction as discussed by the authors, i.e., any characteristic of an actor around which evaluations about them come to be organized, such as age, sex, race, ethnicity, education, occupation, physical attractiveness, intelligence quotients, etc.
Abstract
This chapter reviews theory and research on status organizing processes. A status organizing process is any process in which evaluations of and beliefs about the characteristics of actors become the basis of observable inequalities in face-to-face social interaction. The key concept in the study of status organizing processes is the status characteristic, any characteristic of actors around which evaluations of and beliefs about them come to be organized. Examples include age, sex, race, ethnicity, education, occupation, physical attractiveness, intelligence quotients, reading ability-but there are many others. In the present article we review (a) the current state of the theory of such processes; (b) relevant theoretical research as of September, 1979; (c) a selection of the relevant applied research, with particular reference to sex, race, and physical attractiveness; and (d) some of the interventions that have been devel­ oped to reduce undesired consequences of the process. The phenomenon with which a theory of status organizing processes is concerned is most commonly observed in the study of problem-solving groups whose members differ in status characteristics significant in the larger society. Such groups do not create a social organization de novo, out of the interaction of their members, but instead maintain external status differences inside the group. That informal problem-solving groups evolve inequalities in participa­ tion, evaluation, and influence was shown by Bales in the early fifties

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Citations
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A model of (often mixed) stereotype content: Competence and warmth respectively follow from perceived status and competition.

TL;DR: Contrary to antipathy models, 2 dimensions mattered, and many stereotypes were mixed, either pitying (low competence, high warmth subordinates) or envying (high competence, low warmth competitors).
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The Past, Present, and Future of an Identity Theory*

TL;DR: Among the many traditions of research on "identity", two somewhat different yet strongly related strands of identity theory have developed as mentioned in this paper, reflected in the linkages of social structures with identities.
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Culture and cognition

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study identity, collective memory, social classification, and logics of action in the context of culture and its connections to identity and collective memory in cognitive psychology and social cognition.
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What's the difference? Diversity constructs as separation, variety, or disparity in organizations.

TL;DR: The authors describe three distinctive types of diversity: separation, variety, and disparity, and present guidelines for conceptualization, measurement, and theory testing, highlighting the special case of demographic diversity.
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Social cognitive theory of gender development and differentiation.

TL;DR: This article presents the social cognitive theory of gender role development and functioning, which specifies how gender conceptions are constructed from the complex mix of experiences and how they operate in concert with motivational and self-regulatory mechanisms to guide gender-linked conduct throughout the life course.
References
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What is beautiful is what is good

Kk Dion
TL;DR: The present results indicate a "what is beautiful is good" stereotype along the physical attractiveness dimension with no Sex of Judge X Sex of Stimulus interaction, which has implications on self-concept development and the course of social interaction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex‐Role Stereotypes: A Current Appraisal

TL;DR: For instance, the authors found that positive masculine traits form a cluster entailing competence; positively-valued feminine traits reflect warmth-expressiveness, and positive masculine characteristics are positively valued more often than feminine characteristics.
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