Studies of socioeconomic and ethnic differences in intelligence in the former Soviet Union in the early twentieth century |
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Authors: | Andrei Grigoriev Richard Lynn |
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Affiliation: | aMoscow State Regional University, Russian Federation;bUniversity of Ulster, Coleraine, Northern Ireland, BS52 1SA, United Kingdom |
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Abstract: | This paper reviews the studies of socioeconomic and ethnic and racial differences in intelligence carried out in Russia/USSR during the late 1920s and early 1930s. In these studies the IQs of social classes and of ethnic minorities were tested. These included Tatars (a Caucasoid people), Chuvash and Altai (mixed Caucasoid–Mongoloid peoples), Evenk (a mixed Caucasoid–Arctic people), and Uzbeks (a Central–South Asian people). The results of these studies showed socioeconomic differences of 12 IQ points between the children of white collar and blue collar workers, and that with the exception of the Tartars the ethnic minorities obtained lower IQs than European Russians. |
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Keywords: | Intelligence Socioeconomic class Russia Soviet Union Tatars Chuvash Evenk Altai Uzbeks |
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