<p>This handbook explores prejudice, stereotyping and discrimination primarily as phenomena embedded in the social organization of societies and connected to structural factors and larger societal systems. It offers a unique critical and cross-disciplinary approach to the study of contemporary manifestations of prejudice, stereotyping and discrimination.</p><p>New socio-psychological analyses of the most pressing social problems of our age bring into view future directions of research on prejudice, stereotyping and discrimination oriented to social change and collective action and that engage with wider systems of norms and discourse. The editors draw on social psychology, sociology, social policy, clinical psychology, cultural studies and feminist, antiracist and decolonizing social science to show how social psychology can successfully rekindle its intellectual dialogue with kindred social science fields to create broader foundations for the exploration of the paradoxes lodged at the heart of the social expression of prejudice in liberal democracies. </p><p>This is essential reading for anyone interested in prejudice, discrimination and stereotypes. The handbook will be of interest to academics and researchers exploring both the quantitative and qualitative aspects of discrimination, inequality and social exclusion, as well as students undertaking masters or doctoral studies in social psychology, political psychology and political science. </p> <p><strong>Introduction</strong></p><p>1 Toward a new sociological social psychology of prejudice, stereotyping and discrimination</p><p>Cristian Tileagă, Martha Augoustinos &amp; Kevin Durrheim</p><p>Part I Prejudice, social structure and social justice </p><p>2 Beliefs about the interpersonal vs. structural nature of racism and responses to racial inequality </p><p>Julian M. Rucker, Yale University &amp; Jennifer Richeson, Yale University</p><p>3 Mental health prejudice, discrimination and epistemic injustice: Moving beyond stigma and biomedical dominance</p><p>Dave Harper, University of East London &amp; Kian Vakili, University of East London</p><p>4 Between hope and dread: unaccompanied children, discrimination and the uncertainties of the asylum application process</p><p>Jack Aldridge Deacon, University of Nottingham &amp; Jo Aldridge, Loughborough University</p><p>5 The subtlety of gender stereotypes in the workplace: Current and future directions for research on the glass cliff<b> </b></p><p>Leire Gartzia, University of Deusto &amp; Michelle Ryan, University of Exeter </p><p>Part II Targets of prejudice</p><p>6 Anti-immigrant prejudice and discrimination in Europe </p><p>Ulrich Wagner, Philipps-University Marburg, Patrick Kotzur, Durham University &amp; Maria-Therese Friehs, University of Koblenz-Landau</p><p>7 Roma prejudices in the European Union: Responses to structural inequality </p><p>Salomea Popoviciu, Ruhama &amp; Cristian Tileagă, Loughborough University</p><p>8 Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people: prejudice, stereotyping, discrimination and social change</p><p>Elizabeth Peel, Loughborough University, Sonja J. Ellis, The University of Waikato &amp; Damien W. Riggs, Flinders University</p><p>9 Anti-Muslim sentiments in Western societies </p><p>Maykel Verkuyten, Utrecht University</p><p>10 Explaining Jew-hatred: The structure and psychological antecedents of antisemitic beliefs </p><p>Michał Bilewicz, University of Warsaw</p><p>Part III Discrimination, stereotypes and bias in the field</p><p>11 Discrimination and intergroup contact </p><p>Katy Greenland, Cardiff University</p><p>12 Discrimination in education </p><p>Josephine Cornell, University of Cape Town &amp; Shose Kessi University of Cape Town</p><p>13 Stereotypes: In the head, in language, and in the wild </p><p>Kevin Durrheim, University of Kwazulu-Natal</p><p>14 Implicit bias </p><p>Iain Walker, Australian National University &amp; Susie Wang, University of Groningen</p><p>Part IV Prejudice, intergroup relations and emotions</p><p>15 Beyond prejudice as antipathy: Understanding kinder, gentler forms of discrimination <i>John Dixon, Open University &amp; Darren Langdridge, Open University</i></p><p>16 The politics and history of numbers in intergroup relations and conflict research <i>Philippa Kerr, University of the Free State, South Africa</i></p><p>17 Sentiments of the dispossessed: Emotions of resilience and resistance </p><p>Colin Wayne Leach, Barnard College &amp; Fouad Bou Zeineddine, University of Innsbruck</p><p>Part V The language of prejudice</p><p>18 Elite political discourse on refugees and asylum seekers: The language of social exclusion </p><p>Katarina Pettersson, University of Helsinki &amp; Martha Augoustinos, University of Adelaide</p><p>19 Interactional approaches to discrimination and racism in everyday life </p><p>Jessica Robles, Loughborough University &amp; Natasha Shrikant, University of Colorado at Boulder</p><p>20 Censure and management of racist talk </p><p>Stephen Gibson, Herriot-Watt University</p><p>Part VI Looking to the future</p><p>21 Future directions of research on prejudice, stereotyping and discrimination</p><p>Cristian Tileagă, Kevin Durrheim &amp; Martha Augoustinos</p>