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offered customer service, but because they were questioning why she was there. She
also stated that:
At the same time, I have numerous experiences where I am ignored or have to
assert my position in line, as they skip over to the white person. I am sure that
most black people can relate to the shopping experience where the teller drops
your change into your hand from a height, while somewhat recoiling, and you
see them place the change into the hand of the white customers.
25. These incidents reflect a series of stereotypes, expectations and entitlements that
individual community members hold with respect to people of African descent. Each
of the examples involves a person unknown to the complainant behaving as one
normally would in particular public spaces. Yet, both the individual and the
organizational representatives felt entitled to call the police or to police black bodies.
This reflects the enduring power of stereotypes grounded in the historical exploitation
of people of African descent, including the trafficking in enslaved Africans,
colonization and the long-standing exploitation of black labour and livelihood. Social
institutions, which developed in tandem with the modern nation -State and the modern
human rights framework, are taught stereotyping generation after generation via the
social conditioning of education, the media and community structures. Those
stereotypes are reflected, codified and perpetuated in the social institutions, which, in
turn, leads to the perpetuation of individual belief and expectation, in an endless
cycle.
26. Negative racial stereotypes can have a profound personal impact on people of
African descent. Racial profiling has a harmful effect on one ’s dignity. Victims
sometimes lose their liberty, their connection with their families and communities
and, in the most tragic cases, their lives. Racial profiling is associated with negative
effects, including effects on individuals’ mental and physical health. The
physiological and psychological impact of racism and discrimination is worth
highlighting because those who endure discrimination every day often suffer higher
rates of chronic disease. 11 Racial profiling contributes to barriers that prevent people
of African descent from being able to achieve equal opportunity. Most importantly, it
severely diminishes trust in public institutions and undermines the effectiveness and
authority of many of those institutions.
Racial stereotyping as political theatre: incitement to hatred and hate crimes
27. Political discourse and the exercise of State power may both habituate and
reinforce long-standing racial prejudice. In politics, the deployment of racial
stereotypes for political gain is becoming increasingly common and is particularly
toxic. The rise of far-right political parties, the global financial crisis and longstanding fears about globalization and the dilution of national identity, coupled with
the current movement of migrants and refugees, has resulted in strong
anti-immigration backlash, the scapegoating of migrants, the stoking of racial
prejudices and stereotypes, and violence against people of African descent. Political
leaders have used these phenomena to seek power through appeals to racism,
xenophobia, Afrophobia and nativism, which has had a devastating impact on people
of African descent.
28. As the former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid
Ra’ad Al Hussein, recently cautioned: “We are growing accustomed to the stoking of
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See American Psychological Association, “Physiological and psychological impact of racism and
discrimination for African-Americans”. Available at https://www.apa.org/pi/oema/resources/
ethnicity-health/racism-stress.
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