Concept information
Preferred term
status characteristics/expectation states theory
Definition
- When members of juries, project teams, or study groups differ by gender, race or ethnicity, or even physical attractiveness, how do these differences affect members' conduct? More generally, how does social status, the prestige one possesses based on one's differentially valued social distinctions, affect people's behavior during group encounters? Status characteristics theory (SCT), which is a part of the theoretical research program called expectation states theory, explains this group-level phenomenon. SCT describes the social-psychological process that produces a status hierarchy a rank order of people that is based on social prestige within certain kinds of groups. [Source: Encyclopedia of Group Processes & Intergroup Relations; Status Characteristics/Expectation States Theory]
Broader concept
Belongs to group
URI
http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/N9J-SWQFDFTX-F
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