Housing policy and linguistic profiling: An audit study of three American dialects

IF 1.9 1区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
Language Pub Date : 2023-06-01 DOI:10.1353/lan.0.a899825
K. Wright
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The 1968 Fair Housing Act protects consumers from discrimination based on membership in protected classes, such as their gender, race, and ability. There is a large gap, however, between what this policy seeks to protect and the lived experiences of certain individuals, since many listeners continue to link the production of non-Standard speech varieties with social stereotypes. In light of the findings of Purnell et al. (1999), who demonstrated that such judgments negatively affect housing access, this study was designed to determine if linguistic profiling remains observable in the contemporary housing market. Through an audit of ninety publicly listed rental properties in three demographically heterogeneous Knoxville, TN, neighborhoods, the study analyzed the effects of using three different American dialects: African American Language (AAL), Mainstream US English (MUSE), and Southern American (SA). A single, multidialectal speaker asked property managers questions about each unit and neighborhood. The outcomes were assessed in terms of (i) the caller’s success in gaining an appointment to view the property and (ii) the relation of dialect and neighborhood to the phenomenon of local prestige A key finding is that using non-Standard voices produces significantly better outcomes in neighborhoods with demographics that match those of the indexed social characteristics of the given non-Standard speech variety (e.g. Blackness with AAL in zip code 37914). Results from an attribute assessment are also reported, revealing how general listeners categorize and respond to speech used in the audit study. Analyses of attribute assessments reveal that three very different character profiles emerge from a single person’s speech varieties. These results have stark policy implications, as these linguistic profiles develop without listeners having made accurate or consistent identification of social information—like the race of the speaker—in their percepts. Federal antidiscrimination policy must be adjusted to protect individuals who experience voice-based oppression—in the housing market and across institutions. This study adds to the growing evidence such individuals can use to challenge FHA violations in voice-only contexts.*
住房政策和语言特征:对三种美国方言的审计研究
1968年的《公平住房法》保护消费者免受基于受保护阶层成员身份的歧视,如性别、种族和能力。然而,这项政策寻求保护的内容与某些人的生活经历之间存在很大差距,因为许多听众继续将非标准言论的产生与社会刻板印象联系在一起。根据Purnell等人(1999)的研究结果,他们证明了这种判断会对住房获得产生负面影响,本研究旨在确定在当代住房市场中是否仍然可以观察到语言特征。通过对田纳西州诺克斯维尔三个人口结构不同的社区的90处公开出租房产进行审计,该研究分析了使用三种不同的美国方言的影响:非裔美国人语言(AAL)、美国主流英语(MUSE)和南美洲人语(SA)。一位多方言的演讲者向物业经理询问了有关每个单元和社区的问题。结果是根据(i)来电者成功预约查看房产以及(ii)方言和社区与当地声望现象的关系来评估的。关键发现是,在人口统计数据与给定的索引社会特征相匹配的社区,使用非标准声音会产生明显更好的结果非标准语音种类(例如,邮政编码37914中具有AAL的Blackness)。还报告了属性评估的结果,揭示了普通听众如何对审计研究中使用的语音进行分类和回应。对属性评估的分析表明,一个人的言语变体会产生三种截然不同的性格特征。这些结果具有明显的政策含义,因为这些语言简介的发展没有让听众在感知中准确或一致地识别社会信息,比如说话者的种族。必须调整联邦反歧视政策,以保护在住房市场和各机构中遭受基于声音的压迫的个人。这项研究增加了越来越多的证据,证明这些人可以在纯语音环境中质疑FHA违规行为*
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来源期刊
Language
Language Multiple-
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
48
期刊介绍: Language, the official journal for the Linguistic Society of America, is published quarterly and contains articles, short reports, book reviews and book notices on all aspects of linguistics, focussing on the area of theoretical linguistics. Edited by Greg Carlson, Language serves a readership of over 5,000 and has been the primary literary vehicle for the Society since 1924.
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