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52 Conn. L. Rev. 719 (2020-2021)
Falling Short: On Implicit Biases and the Discrimination of Short Individuals

handle is hein.journals/conlr52 and id is 738 raw text is: CONNECTICUT
LAW REVIEW

VOLUME 52                      JULY 2020                     NUMBER 2
Article
Falling Short: On Implicit Biases and the
Discrimination of Short Individuals
OMER KIMHI
Socio-psychological research solidly shows that people hold implicit biases
against short individuals. We associate a host of positive qualities to those with
above average height, and we belittle those born a few inches short. These implicit
biases, in turn, lead to outright discrimination. Experiments prove that employers
prefer not to hire or promote short employees and that they do not adequately
compensate them. According to various studies, controlling for other variables,
every inch of height is worth hundreds of dollars in annual income, which is no less
severe than the wage gap associated with gender or racial discrimination.
Given the proportions of height discrimination revealed in this Article, I
examine why it is not legally addressed. How come the federal system and most
states do not view height discrimination as illegal, and why are such discriminatory
practices ignored even by their victims? Using psychological literature, I argue
that the answer lies in the naming of this phenomenon. We fail to recognize
height discrimination because it does not fit our mental template of discrimination.
The characteristics we usually associate with discrimination intentional
behavior, clear harm, specific perpetrator/victim, and specific domain do not
exist in height discrimination, so we fail to categorize it as such. This Article
explains why, despite the naming difficulties, the legal system should not ignore
the widespread heightism phenomenon. Based on the psychological literature, it
suggests ways to deal with it, focusing on the provision of information and on
consciousness raising.

719

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