Vijaya Ramya M, Bhullar Naureen
Stockton University, Galloway, NJ USA.
Indian Institute of Management Bangalore, Bengaluru, India.
Rev Evol Polit Econ. 2022;3(3):599-628. doi: 10.1007/s43253-022-00073-8. Epub 2022 Mar 18.
In this paper, we examine whether the prevalence of colorism in India can be linked to discrimination in hiring for people with darker skin shades. Colorism or preference for lighter skin tones has a long history primarily linked to colonialism in parts of Asia and Africa. More recently, this preference for lighter skin has become amplified by growing and global whitening product industries dominated by multinational corporations. In India, the industry has tried to link lighter skin to economic success, specifically labor market success. However, the existence of such a link is yet to be explored given the lack of skin tone-specific data in the global context. We implemented an experimental survey design in India to overcome this lack of data. Participants in our study were asked to evaluate job candidates on the basis of unchanging resumes paired with photographs manipulated to vary skin tones. We did not find a statistically significant bias in favor of resumes paired with lighter-skinned photographs. Overall, participants tended to evaluate both lighter-skinned and darker-skinned candidates similarly. Our findings suggest that colorism in India cannot be easily linked to direct instances of hiring discrimination. Differential outcomes due to preference for skin color though might operate in other economic contexts beyond entry into employment. It may also exist in social contexts like marriage and family or health outcomes and in situations where beauty ideals are more relevant. Our findings provide an important counter-narrative to the skin whitening industry's worrisome efforts to expand their consumer base by linking lighter skin to economic success. Our methodology also provides new directions for future research on colorism, an important new global frontier in stratification economics.
在本文中,我们研究了印度肤色主义的盛行是否与招聘中对肤色较深者的歧视有关。肤色主义或对较浅肤色的偏好由来已久,主要与亚洲和非洲部分地区的殖民主义有关。最近,跨国公司主导的全球美白产品行业不断发展,这种对较浅肤色的偏好被进一步放大。在印度,该行业试图将较浅肤色与经济成功,特别是劳动力市场的成功联系起来。然而,鉴于全球背景下缺乏肤色特定数据,这种联系的存在尚待探索。我们在印度实施了一项实验性调查设计,以克服数据不足的问题。我们研究中的参与者被要求根据不变的简历以及经过处理以改变肤色的照片来评估求职者。我们没有发现对与肤色较浅照片搭配的简历存在统计学上显著的偏好。总体而言,参与者倾向于对肤色较浅和肤色较深的求职者进行类似的评估。我们的研究结果表明,印度的肤色主义不太容易与招聘歧视的直接事例联系起来。尽管因对肤色的偏好而产生的不同结果可能在就业之外的其他经济背景中起作用。它也可能存在于婚姻、家庭或健康结果等社会背景以及与审美观念更相关的情况中。我们的研究结果为美白行业通过将较浅肤色与经济成功联系起来以扩大其消费者群体的令人担忧的努力提供了一个重要的反例。我们的方法也为未来关于肤色主义的研究提供了新方向,肤色主义是分层经济学中一个重要的新的全球前沿领域。