TY - JOUR
T1 - Contextual effects of positive intergroup contact on outgroup prejudice
AU - Christ, Oliver
AU - Schmid, Katharina
AU - Lolliot, Simon
AU - Swart, Hermann
AU - Stolle, Dietlind
AU - Tausch, Nicole
AU - Al-Ramiah, Ananthi
AU - Wagner, Ulrich
AU - Vertovec, Steven
AU - Hewstone, Miles
N1 - Funding: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Research Fellowship CH 743, 2-1 (to O.C.) and a Leverhulme Trust Programme Grant (to M.H.).
PY - 2014/3/18
Y1 - 2014/3/18
N2 - We assessed evidence for a contextual effect of positive intergroup
contact, whereby the effect of intergroup contact between social
contexts (the between-level effect) on outgroup prejudice is greater
than the effect of individual-level contact within contexts (the
within-level effect). Across seven large-scale surveys (five
cross-sectional and two longitudinal), using multilevel analyses, we
found a reliable contextual effect. This effect was found in multiple
countries, operationalizing context at multiple levels (regions,
districts, and neighborhoods), and with and without controlling for a
range of demographic and context variables. In four studies (three
cross-sectional and one longitudinal) we showed that the association
between context-level contact and prejudice was largely mediated by more
tolerant norms. In social contexts where positive contact with
outgroups was more commonplace, norms supported such positive
interactions between members of different groups. Thus, positive contact
reduces prejudice on a macrolevel, whereby people are influenced by the
behavior of others in their social context, not merely on a microscale,
via individuals’ direct experience of positive contact with outgroup
members. These findings reinforce the view that contact has a
significant role to play in prejudice reduction, and has great policy
potential as a means to improve intergroup relations, because it can
simultaneously impact large numbers of people.
AB - We assessed evidence for a contextual effect of positive intergroup
contact, whereby the effect of intergroup contact between social
contexts (the between-level effect) on outgroup prejudice is greater
than the effect of individual-level contact within contexts (the
within-level effect). Across seven large-scale surveys (five
cross-sectional and two longitudinal), using multilevel analyses, we
found a reliable contextual effect. This effect was found in multiple
countries, operationalizing context at multiple levels (regions,
districts, and neighborhoods), and with and without controlling for a
range of demographic and context variables. In four studies (three
cross-sectional and one longitudinal) we showed that the association
between context-level contact and prejudice was largely mediated by more
tolerant norms. In social contexts where positive contact with
outgroups was more commonplace, norms supported such positive
interactions between members of different groups. Thus, positive contact
reduces prejudice on a macrolevel, whereby people are influenced by the
behavior of others in their social context, not merely on a microscale,
via individuals’ direct experience of positive contact with outgroup
members. These findings reinforce the view that contact has a
significant role to play in prejudice reduction, and has great policy
potential as a means to improve intergroup relations, because it can
simultaneously impact large numbers of people.
KW - Diversity
KW - Trust
KW - Social norms
KW - Multilevel analysis
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1320901111
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1320901111
M3 - Article
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 111
SP - 3996
EP - 4000
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 11
ER -