Experimental Design Workshop - Incite at Columbia University
-
Event
Experimental Design Workshop
Friday May 5, 20231:30pm - Part of Series Experimental Design Workshop
Join us for a workshop presentation. This event is free and open to the public.
English when Winning, Black when Losing: How Performance in Sport Shapes Social Categorization
Nan Zhang, Mannheim Centre for European Social Research
Delia Baldassarri, NYU Sociology
According to several sports celebrities' accounts, their national team's performance affects how they are perceived: "When You Win, You're English. When You Lose, You're Black.” The boundaries of national inclusion tend to be more contingent than ethnoracial markers. We build on this observation to investigate under what conditions members of the majority ‘native' population come to see ethnic and racial minorities as ‘us’ rather than as ‘them’. We present results of an experiment on a representative sample of the British population, and use videos of penalty shootouts in major football tournaments to experimentally randomize the ethnicity of unsuccessful players. We introduce a novel categorization task to measure national vs. racial categorization decisions, and find some preliminary evidence that, at least among football fans who strongly identify as English, minority footballers are more likely to be classified according to their race than their nationality when they miss penalties.
Nan Zhang (J.D. / Ph.D. in Political Science, Stanford University) leads the Emmy-Noether Research Group “Making Diversity Work” at the Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (University of Mannheim). His research spans both Sociology and Political Science, with a focus on group relations, language and identity, social norms, and civic behavior. Major applications include research on immigration, ethnic diversity, and state- and nation-building.
Delia Baldassarri is Professor at New York University and senior researcher in the Dondena Centre at Bocconi University. Her research interests are in the fields of economic and political sociology, social networks, and analytical sociology. Her current research projects include a study of the emergence of cooperation in complex societies, focusing on ethnically heterogeneous communities, and the investigation of major trends in U.S. public opinion.
About the Experimental Design Workshop
The workshop gives social scientists the opportunity to workshop the design of an experiment they have not yet fielded. Graduate student and faculty presenters will present their designs and receive specific, actionable feedback from other workshop participants. A list of our previous sessions can be found here.
For inquiries or if you are interested in joining the workshop's email list, please contact Daniel Tadmon (daniel.tadmon@columbia.edu) or James Chu (jyc2163@columbia.edu).
Funding support for the Experimental Design Workshop is provided by the Paul F. Lazarsfeld Lecture Series, administered by Incite, which features events and programming that embody and honor Lazarsfeld’s commitment to the improvement of methodological approaches that address concerns of vital cultural and social significance.