It is a form of racism where specific cultures or a particular ethnicity are targeted.
barriers to cultural interaction
One example that Diversity trainers like to cite as an example of cultural racism in language is referring to Asians as "Oriental." The claim is that this is reducing Asian persons to commodities, such as an Oriental rug.
No, stupid people are the cause of racism. People are just people no matter where you go, the only differences are cultural.
not sure about positive but negative is wars, racism,vandillism
I would think that racism is something that sociology handles more adequately than psychology. but since racism is often passed from parent to child it can be argued that developmental psychology plays a part
Cultural misunderstanding
it was a way of population controll and is something that many asian countries are beginig to do, it creates less conflicting cultural views and less racism although the policy was an act of racism
Cultural racism is best illustrated by the belief that certain cultures are inherently superior or inferior to others, often leading to the marginalization of minority groups. For example, the perception that Western cultural practices and values are the standard of "civilization," while non-Western cultures are deemed primitive or unrefined, exemplifies this form of racism. This manifests in media representations, educational curricula, and social policies that privilege one culture over others, reinforcing stereotypes and systemic inequalities.
Yes, they do, although it is more of nationalistic and cultural prejudices, rather than a racial one.
In general there is little racism in New Zealand, but of course there are exceptions - folk who do not value racial or cultural diversity.
From Wikipedia:Laissez-Faire Racism (a.k.a. symbolic racism) is closely related to color-blind racism and covert racism, and is theorized to encompass an ideology that blames minorities for their poorer economic situations, viewing it as the result of cultural inferiority.[1][2] The term is used largely by scholars of whiteness studies, who are critical of this theorized ideology, while no one does or would self-identify as holding it.And I think you mean Racism, not racim.
Greg Forster has written: 'Cultural patterns and moral laws' -- subject(s): Anglican authors, Christian ethics, Cultural relativism, Natural law 'Ethics of the Letter of James' 'Race and responsibility' -- subject(s): Christianity, Race relations, Racism, Religious aspects of Race relations, Religious aspects of Racism