Xequecal wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
Xeq, you do realize you're referencing the SPLC a hugely discredited organization because of the massive lies they tell?
Sorry, they just funded the study, the actual
study was done by MIT researchers. It certainly looks professionally done to me. While I cannot prove that banks would discriminate based on race the evidence clearly suggests to me that they would, since there is demonstrable discrimination in hiring based on race only.
The SPLC would not fund anything that didn't conform to their own expectations of reality. That said, the "study" in question is horribly written, ill-cited, and prone to making bold assertions without references. Also, here's the money shot:
Page 3 wrote:
For ease of exposition, we refer to the effects uncovered in this experiment as "race" differences. Technically, however, these effects are about racial soundingness of names.
It's not even intellectually honest. More importantly, the authors of the study couldn't be bothered to provide their own review of the pertinent literature. This means, in all honesty, they didn't do their homework. And then we get to such lovely gems as ...
Pages 5,6 wrote:
Finally, these audit studies are extremely expensive, making it difficult to generate large enough samples to understand the nuances and mitigating factors of discrimination. In fact, these budgetary concerns worsen the problem of mismatched auditor pairs. Cost considerations for the use of a few pairs, meaning that any mismatch will easily drive the results. In fact, studies generally tend to find that outcomes significantly differ across pairs.
Our study circumvents these problems. First, because we only use resumes and not people, we can be sure to generate comparability. In fact, since race is randomly assigned to each resume, the same resume will sometimes be associated with an African America name and sometimes with a White name. This guarantees that any differences we find are due solely to the race manipulation. Second, the use of paper resumes also insulates us from demand effects. While the research assistants also know the purpose of the study, our protocol allows little room for conscious or subconscious deviation from the set procedures. Moreover, we can objectively measure whether the randomization occurred as expected. This kind of objective measure is impossible in the case of the previous audit studies. Finally, the relatively lower cost of sending out resumes means that rather than a few auditor pairs, we can send out a large number of resumes. Besides giving us more precise estimates, it also allows us to examine the mechanics of discrimination from many more angles.[6]
[6]A similar "correspondence" technique has been used in a few U.K. studies (Jowell and Precott-Clarke (1970), Brown and Gay (1985), Hubbock and Carter(1980)). These earlier studies had very limited sample size and focused mainly on documenting gap in call-backs between the minority and non-minority groups. Some of these studies also failed to fully match skills between minority and non-minority resumes by imposing differential education background by racial origin.
In other words, we're talking out of our asses by assuming our conclusion before we do any actual research. Of course, there's one major error that pretty much invalidates their study ...
Almost everyone checks resumes for plagiarism and duplication. Also, fictitious addresses are a very quick way to get a resume disqualified. They did poor work and underestimated the savvy and thoroughness of HR departments.
_________________
Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.