3 Ways to Control Your Prejudices

3 Ways to Control Your Prejudices

Last update: 27 September, 2018

We all have prejudices. Prejudices are positive or negative attitudes towards groups of people or members of specific groups. We use prejudices to evaluate and label people we don’t know. For example, you meet a gypsy. You believe that all gypsies are good at playing the guitar. Consequently, your interaction with this person will be determined by your prior belief that they’re a good musician. Prejudices help maintain the hierarchy of status between different groups. Luckily for us, there are different ways to control and reduce our prejudices.

Experts believe that prejudices have three components. Stereotypes are the cognitive component. They represent the mental image that you have of a group. Another component is the emotional one. These are the feelings that you experience related to a group of people. The last component is behavioral and is represented by discrimination. This is the negative behavior that you display towards the group you are prejudiced against.

Like we said before, prejudices are attitudes towards groups of people or members of that group. Social psychology has developed different ways to control your prejudices. These methods are based on the theories of categorization and social identity.

Controlling your prejudices through re-categorization

As human beings, we tend to categorize. We divide people up and put them in certain boxes. Categorization means that we favor those who we include in our categories. We feel prejudiced against those in other categories. So, if you want to control your prejudice, you have to make the limits of these categories more flexible. There are three ways to do this:

  • Decategorization: This consists of seeing members of other categories as individuals instead of just part of a group. Doing this will help you control or reduce your prejudices. Instead of seeing someone as a “member” of another country, see them as an independent person. That is one way to have a more positive attitude towards someone.
  • Cross-categorization: this technique is all about highlighting the commonalities that conflicting groups have. When you make people aware of the categories they share, they feel more positively towards one another. You might practice a religion different from mine, but we share a gender and nationality.
  • Recategorization: This consists of creating a new category that encompasses the members of different categories. For example, we aren’t Spanish and French, we’re European.
Shadows of people reducing prejudice.

“I am who I am and you are who you are. Let’s build a world where I can be me and you can be you and neither you nor I try to make others be like us.” [translation]

-Sub-commander Marcos-

Reducing prejudice through common group identity

This last technique, recategorization, is the one that researchers have studied the most. When we categorize, we form identitiesFor example, if I categorize myself as a woman, I will form a woman’s identity. Consequently, in order to encourage recategorization, we have to create more inclusive identities. Identities that encompass my identity and the identity of others.

For example, if I identify as a woman and you identify as a man, I will tend to favor the members of my group and have prejudices against the members of your group.

Having a common identity increases helpful and cooperative behavior. As such, the more people that make up the identity, the more the benefits of the group. What’s more, returning to the previous example, the initial identities are not lost. We will still be women and feminists. You will still be men and feminists. We have a dual identity. Though there might be a different group with a different identity, they are also members of our group. The problem is that social identities do not activate all at once. The one that is the most important at the moment is the one that is activated.

People with globes in their hands reducing prejudices.

Reducing prejudices through contact

The hypothesis of contact is closely related to categorization strategies. This theory states that it’s possible to reduce prejudices by increasing contact between members of different social groups. The same is true when members of your group establishing close relationships with members of other groups.

However, the contact hypothesis seems to be true only under specific conditions. These circumstances favor contact between members of different social groups. The conditions are the following:

  • There must be social and institutional support when promoting contact.
  • Contact has to be prolonged. There must be enough time for the relationships between group members to be significant.
  • The participants (people who are in contact with one another) have to have a similar status. The condition of both groups should be the same.
  • The involved groups must have common objectives. These common interests have to generate cooperative relationships.

Overall, there are many different ways to reduce prejudices. It seems like creating a category of only “humans” is the perfect way to eliminate prejudice.

Nevertheless, the fact that it’s difficult for people to identify as humans complicates the viability of this option. Maybe a common enemy from another planet would help us identify as humans or earthlings and end prejudice entirely!


This text is provided for informational purposes only and does not replace consultation with a professional. If in doubt, consult your specialist.