Pratto grew up in Boulder, CO. She received her BA at Carnegie Mellon University in 1983, where she conducted research with Susan Fiske on people's conceptions about nuclear war. She continued her education at New York University where she received her Master of Arts degree in 1987 and her Ph.D in Psychology in 1988. Pratto was an Associate Professor of Psychology at Stanford University from 1990-1997 prior to joining the Faculty of Psychology at the University of Connecticut.
Research
Pratto has studied the processes and consequences of inequality, encompassing race and sex discrimination in hiring and workplace environments, prejudice against the LGBTQ community and immigrants, violations of International Humanitarian Law in war-time, terrorism and counter-terrorism, and the Arab uprisings. Pratto and her colleagues received the Morton DeutschConflict Resolution Award in 2008 for their co-authored paper "Power Dynamics in an Experimental Game" published in Social Justice Research. Their study examined relational and structural aspects of power dynamics and the emergence of inequalities as pairs of students played an interactive game. Pratto was part of the research team awarded the Gordon Allport prize in 2011 for their co-authored paper "Diversity policy, social dominance, and intergroup relations: Predicting prejudice in changing social and political contexts" published in Social Justice Research. This multinational study examined anti-Muslim prejudice across countries varying in social norms related to multiculturalism and assimilation. In another multinational study, Pratto and her colleagues were awarded the Otto Klineberg Intercultural and Intergroup Relations Award in 2015 for their coauthored paper “International support for the Arab uprisings: Understanding sympathetic collective action using theories of social dominance and social identity." This study used social identity theory and social dominance theory to account for sympathetic collective actions observed throughout the world in response to the Arab Spring. Pratto uses a variety of research methods, from international surveys and comparative studies to interactive games in the laboratory and field experiments. In collaboration with Oliver John, Pratto examined cognitive processes that direct attention towards negative stimuli that have the potential to adversely impact one's well-being. Her research with Peter Hegarty focused on social constructionism and group differences, with relevance to feminist psychology and lesbian and gay psychology.
Representative Publications
Pratto, F., Lee, I-C., Tan, J. Y., & Pitpitan, E. Y.. . In D. Dunning, Frontiers of social psychology. Social motivation. New York, NY, US: Psychology Press.