All posts tagged: minorities

How a perceived lack of traditional values makes minorities seem younger

How a perceived lack of traditional values makes minorities seem younger

People tend to stereotype sexual minorities and Black men as unusually young, an assumption driven by a shared cultural belief that these groups lack traditional values. This overlapping set of perceptions functions to paint certain demographics as inherent threats to the social order. The research was published in the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. In the early 1970s, sociologist Stanley Cohen popularized the term “folk devils” to describe groups targeted by media-driven moral panic. Cohen analyzed how dominant institutions focused on youth subcultures, turning them into symbols of societal decay. Through these portrayals, young people were framed as actively rejecting established norms and threatening the existing social fabric. New York University Abu Dhabi psychology researcher Jaime L. Napier and her colleagues suspected that similar societal forces shape modern stereotypes of adult minority groups. They predicted that other marginalized populations would be stereotyped in age-related ways because of parallel cultural assumptions about their core values. Previous psychological studies have often focused on a single element of identity at a time, looking at race or gender in …

China’s new ‘ethnic unity’ law could target minorities, say rights groups

China’s new ‘ethnic unity’ law could target minorities, say rights groups

China approved what it called an “ethnic unity” law on Thursday, which rights advocates warn could further marginalise minority groups such as the Uyghurs. The law, passed by the National People’s Congress, formalises policies to promote Mandarin as the “national common language” in education, official business and public places. China’s government has been accused for decades of pursuing policies to force assimilation across the vast country into the Han majority. Social cohesion is a key focus of the new “ethnic unity” law, which criminalises engaging in “violent terrorist activities, ethnic separatist activities, or religious extremist activities”. The law aims to “strengthen cohesion” within China, which the legislation argues is undergoing unprecedented social change. China officially recognises 55 official ethnic minorities within its borders that speak hundreds of languages and dialects. Government policies have already directed that Mandarin Chinese be used as the language of instruction in some areas with large minority populations, such as Tibet and Inner Mongolia. Yalkun Uluyol, a China researcher at Human Rights Watch, described the new legislation as a “significant departure” …

What comes next for Iranian religious minorities?

What comes next for Iranian religious minorities?

(RNS) — Iran’s theocratic regime has long repressed religious minorities, persecuting groups deemed blasphemous, unorthodox or who questioned their religious rule. The ongoing war, combined with the death of Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, creates a moment of great uncertainty for all Iranians, but especially for minorities, who are particularly vulnerable. What happens in the coming days and how the United States responds will determine much about their future. When most of us think of Iran, images of black-turbaned ayatollahs and embassy hostages come to mind. However, the country is incredibly diverse and becoming more so. Large groups of non-Muslim religious minorities exist throughout the rugged country, which is more than twice the size of Texas. According to U.S. State Department reports, the exact size of Iran’s Christian community is unknown, but estimates range from 117,000 to more than 1.2 million. They are clustered in a variety of historic denominations, Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean Catholics, as well as newer Protestant groups, including evangelical Christians. While all live under the same repression, the …

‘Deeply insecure’: Why Bangladeshi minorities are scared ahead of elections | Bangladesh Election 2026

‘Deeply insecure’: Why Bangladeshi minorities are scared ahead of elections | Bangladesh Election 2026

Dhaka, Bangladesh — Sukumar Pramanik, a Hindu teacher in Rajshahi city – about 250km (155 miles) from Bangladesh’s capital, Dhaka – says the country’s upcoming national election could be his final test of trust in politics. Electoral periods in Bangladesh have seen spikes in communal and political violence throughout the country’s history, with religious minorities often bearing the brunt amid intense political competition and social tension. Recommended Stories list of 4 itemsend of list But since August 2024, and the end of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s rule, minorities in Bangladesh have felt under siege, with reports of attacks, killings and arson against their property, even though the government insists that most incidents were not motivated by religious hate. That backdrop has intensified fears ahead of the February 12 election, despite efforts by leading political parties to reach out to minority communities. “The leaders of major parties have assured us that we will be safe before and after the vote,” Pramanik said, but faith in politicians runs low in his community at the moment. After the …

People from sexual minorities really do die younger, new data suggests

People from sexual minorities really do die younger, new data suggests

New data has revealed something the UK has never seen before: clear evidence that sexual minority people die earlier, and at higher rates, than their straight or heterosexual peers. For the first time, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has published overall mortality rates by sexual orientation in England and Wales. The findings come from a new bulletin that links voluntary sexual orientation data collected in the 2021 census with death registrations between March 2021 and November 2024. The linkage was possible for people with valid NHS identification numbers, allowing researchers to examine patterns of death across a population of nearly 29 million adults. Evidence on whether sexual minority people experience higher overall mortality has been mixed, with many previous studies limited by small sample sizes, indirect measures of sexual orientation or a focus on specific causes of death rather than all-cause mortality. The new ONS analysis is the first UK study to link self-reported sexual orientation from the census with national death registrations, allowing population-level mortality rates to be examined across millions of people. …

‘I didn’t know where to turn’: Why ethnic minorities with gambling addictions struggle to get help | UK News

‘I didn’t know where to turn’: Why ethnic minorities with gambling addictions struggle to get help | UK News

On a dark December morning two years ago, Kiki Marriott left her flat and started walking. Content warning: This article contains references to suicide. It was 5am, and she was heading for the station. “I was numb at that point,” she says. “I was just so done with trying to survive and just existing… feeling extremely lonely and isolated and didn’t know where to turn.” She was trapped in a cycle of addiction, gambling all hours and taking cocaine for the maximum buzz. Image: ‘I didn’t know where to turn,’ says Kiki “I sat at the train station thinking about my daughter, thinking about the mistakes that I’ve made in the past, thinking that I didn’t want to live this life any more.” Kiki was waiting for the first train. But that train was late. And she changed her mind. Instead of taking her own life, she decided to seek help. Yet what she would find on that journey of recovery would shock her. “I just realised that there wasn’t anybody that looked like me, …