Color and racial attitudes in white, black and biracial children
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Previous studies of children in United States, Western Europe and Asia have demonstrated a bias
favoring the color white relative to the color black, and a bias favoring light-skinned figures relative
to dark-skinned figures. In this study of eight-year old children, procedures used in previous studies
were administered to biracial children of mixed black and white parentage and to black and white
children of monoracial parentage. Both types of bias were found among the three racial categories,
providing additional evidence that the pro-white and pro-light-skinned biases are pancultural
tendencies. The biases were not different by gender, but they were significantly different by race.
Mean color attitudes of white children were significantly different from biracial children, such that
the white children displayed a stronger pro-white/anti-black bias than the biracial children. Mean
racial attitudes of white children were significantly different from black and biracial children, with
white children showing more pro light-skinned bias than black and biracial children. It appears that
the biracial category should be considered in research on color and racial attitudes.