African Americans are less likely to receive responses to the emails they send, according to new research from a team that included John Holbein, a professor of public policy, politics and education at the University of Virginia’s Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy.
The study, which was published late last month in the peer-reviewed Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is one of the largest to date on racial bias in the U.S. In contrast with previous studies, it shows that everyday discrimination against Black people in America is widespread, cutting across geographic regions, racial groups and political parties.
“Discrimination appears to be the norm, rather than the exception,” the researchers write.
Holbein said that the research team – which also included Ray Block Jr. at Pennsylvania State University, Charles Crabtree at Dartmouth College and J. Quin Monson at Brigham Young University – wanted to focus on instances of “papercut discrimination," or seemingly small and often invisible slights that can accumulate over time.
“There are far too many instances of overt and hostile acts against African Americans, but those are not as common as sending and responding to email,” Holbein said.

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