A Survey Reveals the Feelings of People Who Are Victims of Racism

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Maruf Hassan
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A Survey Reveals the Feelings of People Who Are Victims of Racism

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The Minister Delegate to the Prime Minister for Equality between Women and Men, Diversity and Equal Opportunities, Isabelle Rome declared on January 30 during the presentation of the National Plan to Combat Racism , anti-Semitism and origin-related discrimination 2023-2026: “Racists, anti-Semites, anti-Gypsies, those who distinguish people according to or because of skin color, religion, or nationality, are our most formidable enemies. They are the enemies of the Republic. » This discourse is indeed part of a tense national climate in France concerning this discrimination. On the basis of qualitative and quantitative surveys in different cities in France, it was possible for us to accumulate data from a questionnaire distributed between 2015 and 2020, and relating to the experience of discrimination in the city. If sexism or LGBT phobia emerge in all our territorial surveys, the issue of racism is the one that increases most regularly in our measurements.

Thus, when we ask people who are victims of racism what their relationship is to institutions, three quarters of them express a feeling of contempt. This takes the form of condescending phone number list tones, facies checks, changes of place in transport... Then, when we ask them what they did to resist, they massively answer “nothing”, because they don't believe in change or only a little “because the public services don't care about us! “, they answer in part. Read also: “Macaroni”, “Ritals”: ​​when Italian migrants were also victims of racism.

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How do people feel? It is important to analyze this feeling of discrimination linked to real or supposed origin in a double geographical analysis: in and outside the so-called priority neighborhoods , because the vast majority of people reporting acts of racism place them outside of these neighborhoods. , or from people living outside the said neighborhoods while more than half of our sample lives in the priority neighborhoods of the city. Through other questions, we sought to understand what individuals felt at the time of the discrimination experienced: fear? Shame? And, in general, how do they interpret these events?
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