Publication | Closed Access
The Psychological Impact of Prejudice: Implications for Intergroup Contact
180
Citations
50
References
2003
Year
EthnicityGroup PhenomenonSocial PsychologyRacial PrejudiceIntergroup ConflictSocial InfluenceIntergroup ContactIntergroup RelationSocial SciencesPsychologyStereotypesPrejudiceDevalued GroupsSocial IdentityGroup MembersOutgroup MembersApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheorySociology
This research concerns the effects of prejudice on how members of devalued groups feel toward intergroup contact. With members of laboratory-generated groups (Study 1) and devalued ethnic groups (Study 2), two experimental studies tested the impact of exposure to prejudice on emotional states and feelings toward cross-group interactions. Results suggest that exposure to prejudice can negatively affect group members' emotional states in intergroup contexts, and can lead them to feel more negatively toward interactions with both a single, prejudiced outgroup member, and with outgroup members in general. Implications of the findings and suggested directions for future research are discussed.
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