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College undergraduates (211, female and male, mostly white) responded to a 7-point questionnaire with subscales on racial, sexual, and homosexual groups. Political orientation, religious membership and involvement, and parent's educational level were also obtained. All intercorrelations of the three scales were positive and significant ( p < .001) and ranged from .44 to .69. Females were significantly lower than males in sexism but not in racism or gayism. Sexism and gayism scores were negatively correlated with father's and mother's education. All three forms of prejudice were higher for those professing more religious involvement; other typical patterns of bias among the three major U. S. religions were found. Political orientation was also related to prejudice, with more bias found as one approaches the Conservative end of the spectrum.
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Nancy M. Henley
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Fred L. Pincus
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Psychological Reports
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
University of Massachusetts Lowell
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Henley et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1ea996544bdf605faf2401 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1978.42.1.83