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Pervasive Prejudice?: Unconventional Evidence of Race and Gender Discrimination (Studies in Law and Economics)
 
 
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Pervasive Prejudice?: Unconventional Evidence of Race and Gender Discrimination (Studies in Law and Economics) [Hardcover]

Ian Ayres (Author)

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Book Description

October 29, 2001 0226033511 978-0226033518 1
If you're a woman and you shop for a new car, will you really get the best deal? If you're a man, will you fare better? If you're a black man waiting to receive an organ transplant, will you have to wait longer than a white man?

In Pervasive Prejudice? Ian Ayres confronts these questions and more. In a series of important studies he finds overwhelming evidence that in a variety of markets—retail car sales, bail bonding, kidney transplantation, and FCC licensing—blacks and females are consistently at a disadvantage. For example, when Ayres sent out agents of different races and genders posing as potential buyers to more than 200 car dealerships in Chicago, he found that dealers regularly charged blacks and women more than they charged white men. Other tests revealed that it is commonly more difficult for blacks than whites to receive a kidney transplant because of federal regulations. Moreover, Ayres found that minority male defendants are frequently required to post higher bail bonds than their Caucasian counterparts.

Traditional economic theory predicts that free markets should drive out discrimination, but Ayres's startling findings challenge that position. Along with empirical research, Ayres offers game—theoretic and other economic methodologies to show how prejudice can enter the bargaining process even when participants are supposedly acting as rational economic agents. He also responds to critics of his previously published studies included here. These studies suggest that race and gender discrimination is neither a thing of the past nor merely limited to the handful of markets that have been the traditional focus of civil rights laws.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Perhaps the greatest contribution of Pervasive Prejudice is that it reminds us that the civil rights laws meant to protect women and minorities are still not fulfilling their promise. . . . As Ayres observes, the current legal structure has not combated or sufficiently curtailed discrimination in the marketplace. Could laws be drafted to eradicate these subtle and not so subtle forms of discrimination? If so, should they even be attempted? . . . It is in raising these questions that Ayres may prove to have an impact on the pervasive prejudice he describes."
(University of Oklahoma Law Review )

"Ayres presents empirical evidence that blacks and females are consistently at a disadvantage in a variety of markets. . . . Challenging traditional economic theory that free markets drive out discrimination, he uses game-theoretic and other economic methodologies to show how prejudice can enter the bargaining process even when participants are supposedly acting as rational economic agents."
(Law and Social Inquiry )

"Ayres suggests that race and gender discrimination is not limited to the handful of markets regulated by our civil rights laws. Discrimination can persist in any of the retail markets where minority consumers have imperfect information about how their white counterparts are treated-including retail car sales, kidney transplants, bail bonding, and FCC licensing."




(Forbes.com )

“The sheer amount of new evidence [the book] brings together, its command of very disparate literatures and debates make it an impressive piece of work and clearly worth reading. I think it would provide a useful supplement to any course that focuses on racial discrimination.”—Caren G. Dubnoff, Law and Politics
(Caren G. Dubnoff, Law and Politics )

From the Inside Flap

If you're a woman shopping for a new car, will you really get a good deal? If you're a man, will you fare better? If you're a black man waiting to receive an organ transplant, will you have to wait longer than a white man?

In Pervasive Prejudice? Ian Ayres confronts these questions and more. In a series of important studies he finds overwhelming evidence that in a variety of markets-retail car sales, bail bonding, and kidney transplantation-blacks and females are consistently at a disadvantage. For example, when Ayres sent out agents of different races and genders posing as potential buyers to more than 200 car dealerships in Chicago, he found that dealers regularly charged blacks and women more than they charged white men. Other tests revealed that it is commonly more difficult for blacks than whites to receive a kidney transplant because of federal regulations. Moreover, Ayres found that minority male defendants are frequently required to post higher bail bonds than their Caucasian counterparts.

Traditional economic theory holds that free markets drive out discrimination, but Ayres's startling findings challenge that position. Along with empirical research, Ayres offers game-theoretic and other economic methodologies to show how prejudice can enter the bargaining process even when participants are supposedly acting as rational economic agents. He also responds to critics of his previously published studies included here. These studies suggest that race and gender discrimination is neither a thing of the past nor merely limited to the handful of markets that have been the traditional focus of civil rights laws.

Product Details


More About the Author

Ian Ayres is the William K. Townsend Professor at Yale Law School and the Yale School of Management, and is editor of the Journal of Law, Economics and Organization. In addition to his best-selling SuperCrunchers, Ayres has written for the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, International Herald Tribune, and The New Republic. He lives in New Haven, Connecticut.Barry Nalebuff is Professor of Economics and Management at the Yale School of Management. His books include The Art of Strategy (an update of the best-selling Thinking Strategically) and Co-opetition. He is the author of fifty scholarly articles and has been an associate editor of five academic journals. He lives in New Haven, Connecticut.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
kidney transplantation, frequency block, consummated transactions, fair driving, organ donation, defendant characteristics, spectrum auctions, offense category, narrow tailoring, clinical transplantation, nondesignated bidders, bail bond market, higher bail amounts, consequential animus, associational animus, regional narrowband auction, rare antigen points, installment subsidy, nondesignated firms, different tester types, white female testers, lower bond rates, affirmative action subsidies, black male testers, unjustified disparate impact
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New Haven, Auctions Decreased the Deficit, United States, Ian Ayres, African Americans, Transplantation Proc, Legal Implications, Supreme Court, New Eng, Advanced Wireless, Clinical Transplants, John Yinger, New York, Legal Stud, Renal Transplantation, West Supp, Peter Siegelman, Michael Dennis, European American, Joel Waldfogel, Los Angeles, Michael Cecka, Gary Becker, Jody David Armour, Margery Austin Turner
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Front Cover | Front Flap | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Flap | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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