Does contact reduce prejudice or does prejudice reduce contact? A longitudinal test of the contact hypothesis among majority and minority groups in three european countries.
University of Sussex · Royal Holloway University of London · +2 more institutions
Abstract
A widely researched panacea for reducing intergroup prejudice is the contact hypothesis. However, few longitudinal studies can shed light on the direction of causal processes: from contact to prejudice reduction (contact effects) or from prejudice to contact reduction (prejudice effects). The authors conducted a longitudinal field survey in Germany, Belgium, and England with school students. The sample comprised members of both ethnic minorities (n = 512) and ethnic majorities (n = 1,143). Path analyses yielded both lagged contact effects and prejudice effects: Contact reduced prejudice, but prejudice also reduced contact. Furthermore, contact effects were negligible for minority members. These effects were…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 108.57
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 68
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Prejudice (legal term)
- Contact hypothesis
- Psychology
- Social psychology
- Outgroup
- Ethnic group
- Contact theory
- Social distance
- Reduced inequalities