Thomas F. Pettigrew Explained

Thomas F. Pettigrew
Birth Date:1931 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Richmond, Virginia
Nationality:American
Discipline:Social psychology
Workplaces:University of California, Santa Cruz
Main Interests:Social psychological and structural factors in intergroup relations; racial prejudice; meta-analyses of intergroup contact and relative deprivation research.
Influences:Gordon Allport, Samuel A. Stouffer, Talcott Parsons.
Awards:Cooley-Mead Award, 2014;
Website:https://pettigrew.socialpsychology.org/
Spouse:Ann Hallman

Thomas Fraser Pettigrew (born March 14, 1931) is an American social psychologist best known for his research on American civil rights, and is one of the leading experts in the social science of race and ethnic relations.

Early life

Pettigrew was born in Richmond, Virginia in 1931 during a period of racial segregation and intense prejudice in the American South. As a youth, Pettigrew witnessed racial injustice first hand, such as a formative experience when he was accompanying his African American caregiver, Mildred Adams to movie starring Humphrey Bogart, her favorite actor.

She was barred from entry due to a "whites only" rule, and repetitions of such experiences produced in Pettigrew an intense abhorrence of racial discrimination and intolerance, strongly motivating his passion for research into racial prejudice.

Career

Pettigrew received his bachelor's degree in psychology from University of Virginia, and his M.A., PhD. in social psychology from Harvard University where Gordon Allport and Samuel A. Stouffer were his mentors. He received his PhD in 1956.

Personal life

In 1956, Pettigrew married physician Ann Hallman Pettigrew who at the time was a pre-med student at Harvard University. They had one child, Mark Fraser Pettigrew born in 1966. Pettigrew taught at Harvard for 23 years and in 1980 became a research professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Research

Pettigrew's initial research showed that psychological factors such as orientation towards authoritarianism could not alone account for greater hostility towards Black Americans in the South. Further structural components and societal norms he argued had to be considered for a more complete description of the phenomenon, an approach he later referred to as his multilevel approach to social issues using several levels of analysis. The case of prejudice for example requires:

  1. The micro level of analysis considering attitudes, cognitions and personality dynamics of individuals.
  2. The macro level – including a society's structural aspects such as norms, and mores.
  3. The meso level – where "the immediate situation of social interaction plays a key role.

Pettigrew has studied each level and its interactions with others throughout his career, such as the role authoritarianism plays with prejudice, subtle individual prejudicial attitudes affect the undermining of desegregation, or friendship plays in his reformulation of intergroup conflict and contact theory. Pettigrew continues to argue forcefully that no level alone is sufficient for adequate analysis.

Books and Monographs

References