Publication | Closed Access
How should intergroup contact be structured to reduce bias among majority and minority group children?
73
Citations
39
References
2010
Year
EthnicityGroup PhenomenonSocial PsychologyRacial PrejudiceEducationSocial CategorizationDual IdentitySocial SciencesIntergroup RelationIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)Cultural DiversityStereotypesMinority StudiesChild PsychologySocial IdentityGroup InteractionOutgroup MembersEthnic IdentityRecategorization StrategiesSocial Identity TheoryIdentity Studies (Memory Studies)Collective SelfCultureMinority Group ChildrenMinority InfluenceSociologyIntergroup Cooperation
This experiment examined the effectiveness of one-group and dual-identity recategorization strategies on reducing intergroup bias among 180 European Portuguese and African Portuguese 9- and 10-year-old children. Results revealed that each of these recategorization strategies, relative to one that emphasized separate group identities, was successful in producing positive attitudes toward the outgroup children present during the session, the outgroup as a whole, and the outgroup as a whole three weeks later. Consistent with a functional perspective regarding which representation would most effectively promote their group’s goals, a dual identity was more effective for the European Portuguese majority group, whereas a one-group identity was more effective for the African Portuguese minority group. Additional analyses explored a model of the process of generalization that formally links attitudes toward the outgroup as a whole to the attitudes toward outgroup members present during contact.
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