Obama inspires mixed-race workers to achieve in workplace
March 18th, 2009 - 2:55 pm ICT by ANI
Washington, March 18 (ANI): A new research has suggested that US president Barack Obama has become a glorious mascot for biethnic people seeking to achieve in the workplace.
The research, carried out at the University of Leicester, UK, determines that Obama is seen to give inspiration and new impetus to biethnic people who seek to achieve against the odds.
Postgraduate researcher Rana Sinha has studied if a biethnic background provides any advantage to a biethnic adult in adapting to the modern international workplace.
According to Rana, The number of biethnic or biracial people, who are children born to parents from different ethnic backgrounds has grown rapidly all over the globe.
There are many studies of how biracial or biethnic children and adolescents adapt to their environment where monoethnic people, who are children born to parents from the same ethnic backgrounds are a majority by default.
But, there is almost no research on how biethnic adults adapt to the workplace.
My research at the University of Leicester aimed to discover if a biethnic background provides any advantage to a biethnic adult in adapting to the modern international workplace, said Rana.
Barack Obama, the eloquent president of the USA has now become a glorious mascot for biethnic people as highly successful and able individuals, who rise and succeed against many odds, he added.
The findings of this research did not refute a commonly prevalent stereotype that biethnic children should identify with the parent of colour because society will ultimately view them from this perspective.
President Barack Obama also identifies himself as black.
A second stereotype is the belief that biethnic children and adults avoid discussing their ethnic heritage.
This proves to be untrue and any such reticence depends on the context and the motives of the person engaging in such discussions, as pointed out by the research.
According to Rana, President Obama plays a very important role as a celebrity mascot in lessening the burden of the third stereotype, which portrays biethnic individuals as people who will be rejected by all ethnic/racial groups and considered to be marginal but not actual members of these groups does not hold either in a modern society. (ANI)
- '1-drop rule' still persists for biracial individuals in our society - Dec 09, 2010
- Barack Obama dominates children's world of books - Nov 15, 2009
- Middle-born child has the last laugh - Dec 28, 2011
- US kids develop 'Math is for boys' stereotype as early as 2nd grade - Mar 15, 2011
- White kids now a 'minority' in two UK cities due to unbridled Asian, African immigration - Jan 25, 2011
- 'Maths for boys' stereotype develops in second grade - Mar 15, 2011
- Kids with divorced parents 'have more suicidal thoughts' - Jan 20, 2011
- Obama administration disappointed with ICANN's approval of .xxx domain - Mar 19, 2011
- Obamas find Humayun's Tomb 'spectacular', interact with children (Second Lead) - Nov 07, 2010
- Obama's stepmother granted British citizenship - Dec 13, 2011
- Over six in 10 Florida white voters inspired by Obama's win despite lingering racism - Sep 14, 2010
- Obama hails India's economic reforms - Nov 08, 2010
- Kids with Williams syndrome show no racial bias - Apr 13, 2010
- Rights activist Cornel West arrested - Oct 17, 2011
- Polls estimate Obama's approval among Americans at 50 percent - Mar 16, 2011
Tags: adolescents, adults, barack obama, belief that, biracial people, ethnic backgrounds, ethnic heritage, globe, impetus, inspiration, mascot, mixed race, motives, postgraduate researcher, president of the usa, reticence, sinha, stereotype, university of leicester, university of leicester uk