Skin Tone and Mexicans’ Perceptions of Discrimination in New Immigrant Destinations

Author:

Marrow Helen B.1ORCID,Okamoto Dina G.2,García Melissa J.2,Adem Muna2ORCID,Tropp Linda R.3

Affiliation:

1. Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA

2. Indiana University Bloomington, Bloomington, IN, USA

3. University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, USA

Abstract

Colorism literature examines how skin tone—alongside prototypical group features and hairstyles—correlates with socioeconomic, health, and political outcomes. Yet few studies have explicitly operationalized how skin tone shapes Latinos’ experiences of racialization in “new” U.S. destinations. Here, we draw on a large, representative sample of Mexican immigrants (N = 500) living in two large metropolitan areas (Atlanta and Philadelphia) to investigate how skin tone shapes their perceptions about the frequency and sources of discrimination. Even after controlling for demographic, economic, and immigration–specific factors, including ethnoracial self–identification, we show darker skin tone is significantly associated with higher reports of racial discrimination, discrimination specifically from U.S.-born Whites, and a stronger tendency to struggle internally in response. Together, these results support colorism literature’s argument that skin tone is distinct from race and offer new insights into how skin tone shapes the lived experiences of Mexican immigrants outside the U.S. Southwest.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Psychology

Reference60 articles.

1. Racialized legal status as a social determinant of health

2. Atlanta Regional Commission. 2015. “A Regional Snapshot of Ethnic Populations: Foreign-Born, Hispanic-Latinos & Asians. New Voices, Global Atlanta Snapshots, Atlanta, GA.” file:///Volumes/USB30FD/To%20Office/RSF/AtlantaRegCommission_Global-Atl-Snapshot-Ethnic-Pop_underSiteSelection.pdf.

3. From bi-racial to tri-racial: Towards a new system of racial stratification in the USA

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