Privilege: Difference between revisions
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White privilege | White privilege | ||
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Explains how "white people are, through racialization [prioritization of skin color arising from racism</span><span>], advantaged by their skin colour even in the event of economic disadvantage." - </span>''<span>Race Forward <ref> https://www.raceforward.org/sites/default/files/Race%20Reporting%20Guide%20by%20Race%20Forward_V1.1.pdf </ref> </span></span> | |||
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</ul></ref> For example, queer people have to declare their sexuality, otherwise they are often assumed to be heterosexual.</span></span> | </ul></ref> For example, queer people have to declare their sexuality, otherwise they are often assumed to be heterosexual.</span></span> | ||
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Latest revision as of 19:46, 20 October 2022
Privilege is the systemic effect observed at the individual and social level where differential treatment and/or access to resources is due to socially-constructed positionality. - The HUB
Examples of Privilege
White privilege |
Explains how "white people are, through racialization [prioritization of skin color arising from racism], advantaged by their skin colour even in the event of economic disadvantage." - Race Forward [1] |
Able-bodied privilege |
Able-bodied privilege is "living under the assumption that everybody else on earth can speak, hear, see, and get around, more-or-less the same way we do, with a similar amount of ease." - Kate Harveston [2] |
Heterosexual privilege |
Heterosexual privilege is "unearned, often unconscious or taken for granted benefits afforded to heterosexuals in a heterosexist society based on their sexual orientation." -University of California [3] For example, queer people have to declare their sexuality, otherwise they are often assumed to be heterosexual.
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For more on how privilege and oppression intersects, see intersectionality.
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