The palliative and pernicious effects of racial system justification for the racially privileged and the racially oppressed

Systemic racism carries disparate and varying impacts for members of advantaged and disadvantaged racial groups, not only materially and socially, but also psychically, with consequences for psychological wellbeing. To further explore the varying psychological experience of advantaged and disadvanta...

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Main Authors: Jeannine Alana Bertin, Kemi A. Soyeju, Benjamin A. Saunders
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Social Psychology
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsps.2025.1525321/full
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author Jeannine Alana Bertin
Kemi A. Soyeju
Benjamin A. Saunders
author_facet Jeannine Alana Bertin
Kemi A. Soyeju
Benjamin A. Saunders
author_sort Jeannine Alana Bertin
collection DOAJ
description Systemic racism carries disparate and varying impacts for members of advantaged and disadvantaged racial groups, not only materially and socially, but also psychically, with consequences for psychological wellbeing. To further explore the varying psychological experience of advantaged and disadvantaged racial groups within a racialized social system, we apply a system justification perspective by examining the degree to which the acceptance vs. rejection of the racialized status quo is associated with ethnic-racial identity attitudes and, consequently, with psychological wellbeing. Specifically, we hypothesized that for racially advantaged group members, racial system justification would positively predict psychological wellbeing, and decreased ethnic-racial salience and ethnic-racial self-hatred would mediate this relationship. For racially disadvantaged groups, we hypothesized that racial system justification would negatively predict psychological wellbeing mediated by its association with racial self-hatred. However, we also tested a competing hypothesis that racial system justification would positively predict psychological wellbeing for the racially disadvantaged mediated by its association with racial salience – reflecting a possible simultaneously palliative effect of racial system justification among the racially disadvantaged. We tested these hypotheses across two studies examining the relationship between racial system justification, ethnic-racial identity salience and self-hatred attitudes, and psychological wellbeing among White and Black Americans. Among White Americans (Study 1, N = 371), we found that racial system justification predicted wellbeing (i.e., the likelihood of reporting zero – vs. one or more – bad mental health days) and that this association with wellbeing was mediated separately by decreased ethnic-racial self-hatred, and to a lesser extent, ethnic-racial salience. In a sample of Black American participants (Study 2, N = 414), we tested the racial system justification–wellbeing association by examining the association between racial system justification and psychological distress. We found evidence of a positive indirect association between racial system justification and psychological distress through increased racial self-hatred, while also finding some evidence of a negative indirect association between racial system justification and psychological distress through decreased racial salience. The results point to the possibility that while racial system justification is associated with wellbeing for racially advantaged groups, it may have simultaneous palliative and pernicious associations with wellbeing for disadvantaged groups, based on its diverging associations with the salience and self-hatred aspects of racial identity attitudes.
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spelling doaj-art-384e80a83e7d48fb8ffb1cf1ae34d41a2025-06-27T05:31:33ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Social Psychology2813-78762025-06-01310.3389/frsps.2025.15253211525321The palliative and pernicious effects of racial system justification for the racially privileged and the racially oppressedJeannine Alana Bertin0Kemi A. Soyeju1Benjamin A. Saunders2Department of Psychology, New York University, New York City, NY, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, Long Island University Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY, United StatesDepartment of Psychology, Long Island University Brooklyn, Brooklyn, NY, United StatesSystemic racism carries disparate and varying impacts for members of advantaged and disadvantaged racial groups, not only materially and socially, but also psychically, with consequences for psychological wellbeing. To further explore the varying psychological experience of advantaged and disadvantaged racial groups within a racialized social system, we apply a system justification perspective by examining the degree to which the acceptance vs. rejection of the racialized status quo is associated with ethnic-racial identity attitudes and, consequently, with psychological wellbeing. Specifically, we hypothesized that for racially advantaged group members, racial system justification would positively predict psychological wellbeing, and decreased ethnic-racial salience and ethnic-racial self-hatred would mediate this relationship. For racially disadvantaged groups, we hypothesized that racial system justification would negatively predict psychological wellbeing mediated by its association with racial self-hatred. However, we also tested a competing hypothesis that racial system justification would positively predict psychological wellbeing for the racially disadvantaged mediated by its association with racial salience – reflecting a possible simultaneously palliative effect of racial system justification among the racially disadvantaged. We tested these hypotheses across two studies examining the relationship between racial system justification, ethnic-racial identity salience and self-hatred attitudes, and psychological wellbeing among White and Black Americans. Among White Americans (Study 1, N = 371), we found that racial system justification predicted wellbeing (i.e., the likelihood of reporting zero – vs. one or more – bad mental health days) and that this association with wellbeing was mediated separately by decreased ethnic-racial self-hatred, and to a lesser extent, ethnic-racial salience. In a sample of Black American participants (Study 2, N = 414), we tested the racial system justification–wellbeing association by examining the association between racial system justification and psychological distress. We found evidence of a positive indirect association between racial system justification and psychological distress through increased racial self-hatred, while also finding some evidence of a negative indirect association between racial system justification and psychological distress through decreased racial salience. The results point to the possibility that while racial system justification is associated with wellbeing for racially advantaged groups, it may have simultaneous palliative and pernicious associations with wellbeing for disadvantaged groups, based on its diverging associations with the salience and self-hatred aspects of racial identity attitudes.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsps.2025.1525321/fullsystem justificationdisadvantaged groupsethnic-racial identityracial attitudes and identitiesracial salienceracial self-hatred
spellingShingle Jeannine Alana Bertin
Kemi A. Soyeju
Benjamin A. Saunders
The palliative and pernicious effects of racial system justification for the racially privileged and the racially oppressed
Frontiers in Social Psychology
system justification
disadvantaged groups
ethnic-racial identity
racial attitudes and identities
racial salience
racial self-hatred
title The palliative and pernicious effects of racial system justification for the racially privileged and the racially oppressed
title_full The palliative and pernicious effects of racial system justification for the racially privileged and the racially oppressed
title_fullStr The palliative and pernicious effects of racial system justification for the racially privileged and the racially oppressed
title_full_unstemmed The palliative and pernicious effects of racial system justification for the racially privileged and the racially oppressed
title_short The palliative and pernicious effects of racial system justification for the racially privileged and the racially oppressed
title_sort palliative and pernicious effects of racial system justification for the racially privileged and the racially oppressed
topic system justification
disadvantaged groups
ethnic-racial identity
racial attitudes and identities
racial salience
racial self-hatred
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsps.2025.1525321/full
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