Overall trends A 2013 analysis of
World Values Survey data by
The Washington Post looked at the fraction of people in each country that indicated they would prefer not to have neighbours from a differing race. It ranged from below 5% in Australia, New Zealand, and many countries in the Americas, to 51.4% in
Jordan; Europe had wide variation, from below 5% in the UK, France, Norway, and Sweden, to 22.7% in Germany. More than 30 years of field experimental studies have found significant levels of discrimination against people of color in labor, housing, and product markets in 10 countries.
Discrimination against refugees, asylum seekers, migrants and internally displaced persons Around the world,
refugees,
asylum seekers,
migrants and
internally displaced persons have been the victims of racial discrimination, racist attacks,
xenophobia and ethnic and religious intolerance. According to the
Human Right Watch, "
racism is both a cause and a product of
forced displacement, and an obstacle to its solution." Prior to that the
European Union had started implementing the hotspot system, which categorized people them as either asylum seekers or
economic migrants, and Europe's patrolling of its southern borders between 2010 and 2016 intensified, resulting in deals with
Turkey and
Libya.
The Netherlands A study conducted in the
Netherlands and published in 2013 found significant levels of discrimination against job applicants with Arabic-sounding names.
Israel Palestinian citizens of Israel, who constitute approximately 20% of the population, face disparities in land ownership, political representation, education, and employment. Over 65 laws create structural advantages for Jewish citizens in areas such as resource allocation, housing, and legal rights. Land ownership laws designate approximately 93% of land as state property or controlled by the
Jewish National Fund, which explicitly restricts non-Jewish ownership and leasing. Disparities in public funding result in lower per capita investment in Palestinian-majority municipalities, affecting infrastructure, schools, and social services. The 2018
Nation-State Law defined Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people, affirming exclusive national rights for Jewish citizens while downgrading Arabic from an official language to a special status.
Africa The British colonial impact greatly affected the cultures of African society but the differences in the countries like Nigeria remain as close to tradition compared to countries like South Africa. American racism also plays a part that escalates racism in Nigeria but American racism ideas influencing African Cultures. The racism that was developed by the influence of colonization and American influenced there to create levels of power based on racism. Racism in African cultures is connected to the opportunities received in life, virus susceptibility, and tribal traditions. For example, in the north, an indirect policy of rule settled a new way of life between the colonizing government and the Fulani- Hausa ruling class. Because of this the North falls behind the South and West on education development which causes racial malignity.
Uganda While Uganda was under Idi Amin's rule, there was a policy to replace Asians and
white people with blacks. Idi Amin had also expressed
antisemitic views.
Liberia The
constitution of Liberia renders non-blacks ineligible for citizenship. After former Liberian president
George Weah proposed to remove the clause that restricts citizenship to individuals of
African descent, calling it "unnecessary, racist and inappropriate," he faced pushback from Liberians. Rufus Oulagbo, a Liberian businessman, expressed his concern with the possibility of the clause's removal by saying, "White people will definitely enslave black Liberians."
United Kingdom A 2023
University of Cambridge survey which featured the largest sample of Black people in Britain found that 88% had reported racial discrimination at work, 79% believed the police unfairly targeted black people with
stop and search powers and 80% definitely or somewhat agreed that
racial discrimination was the biggest barrier to academic attainment for young Black students.
Formal equality based on race continues to be violated in the United Kingdom.
Germany Racial discrimination in
Germany affects various ethnic and religious minority groups, including people of
Turkish and Middle Eastern descent,
Black Germans,
Romani communities, asylum seekers, and
Jewish populations. People of Turkish and Middle Eastern descent constitute one of the most discriminated against minorities in Germany. Many are descendants of guest workers (
Gastarbeiter) who arrived during the 1960s and 1970s. Studies indicate that job applicants with Turkish, Arab, or
Muslim-sounding names receive significantly fewer interview invitations compared to those with German-sounding names. In the education system, children of Turkish and
Arab backgrounds are disproportionately placed in lower-tier
secondary schools, limiting access to higher education and skilled professions. The Romani community in Germany, estimated to number between 120,000 and 200,000, also faces persistent discrimination in housing, education, and employment. Many Roma families experience forced evictions and struggle to secure rental contracts due to widespread ethnic profiling by landlords. In the education system, Roma children are disproportionately placed in special education schools and have lower enrollment rates in higher education.
United States With regard to employment, multiple
audit studies have found strong evidence of racial discrimination in the United States' labor market, with magnitudes of employers' preferences of white applicants found in these studies ranging from 50% to 240%. Other such studies have found significant evidence of discrimination in car sales, home insurance applications, provision of medical care, and hailing taxis. There is some debate regarding the method used to signal race in these studies.
Employment Racial discrimination in the workplace falls into two basic categories: •
Disparate Treatment: An employer's policies discriminate based upon any immutable racial characteristic, such as skin, eye or hair color, and certain facial features; •
Disparate Impact: Although an employer may not intend to discriminate based on racial characteristics, its policies nonetheless have an adverse effect based upon race. Discrimination may occur at any point in the employment process, including pre-employment inquiries, hiring practices, compensation, work assignments and conditions, privileges granted to employees, promotion, employee discipline and termination. Researchers
Marianne Bertrand and
Sendhil Mullainathan, at the
University of Chicago and
MIT found in a 2004 study, that there was widespread racial discrimination in the workplace. In their study, candidates perceived as having "white-sounding names" were 50% more likely than those whose names were merely perceived as "sounding black" to receive callbacks for interviews. The researchers view these results as strong evidence of unconscious biases rooted in
the United States' long history of discrimination (e.g.,
Jim Crow laws, etc.)
Devah Pager, a sociologist at
Princeton University, sent matched pairs of applicants to apply for jobs in Milwaukee and New York City, finding that black applicants received callbacks or job offers at half the rate of equally qualified whites. Another recent audit by
UCLA sociologist S. Michael Gaddis examines the job prospects of black and white college graduates from elite private and high-quality state higher education institutions. This research finds that blacks who graduate from an elite school such as Harvard have about the same prospect of getting an interview as whites who graduate from a state school such as UMass Amherst. A 2001 study of
workplace evaluation in a large U.S. company showed that black supervisors rate white subordinates lower than average and vice versa. Research indicates that
unemployment rates are higher for blacks and Latinos than for whites.
Housing Multiple experimental audit studies conducted in the United States have found that blacks and Hispanics experience discrimination in about one in five and one in four housing searches, respectively. Researchers found in contrast to White families, families of color were led to obtain housing in poor, low-quality communities due to
discrimination during the home-buying process. Persons affected by homelessness also show a large disparity with more homeless individuals being minorities in the United States. == Effects on health ==