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Reducing Exclusionary Attitudes through Interpersonal Conversation: Evidence from Three Field Experiments
273
Citations
67
References
2020
Year
Social PsychologyRacial PrejudiceSocial InfluencePublic OpinionPolitical PolarizationPolitical BehaviorSocial ExclusionCommunicationPsychologySocial SciencesAttitude TheoryIntergroup RelationBiasConversation AnalysisPolitical CommunicationExclusionary Attitudes—prejudiceTransgender PeoplePolitical CognitionUnconscious BiasSocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesApplied Social PsychologyInterpersonal ConversationSocial CognitionExclusionary AttitudesSocial BiasInterpersonal CommunicationSocial BehaviorPolitical AttitudesThree Field ExperimentsHuman InteractionArtsAffect PerceptionPersuasionNonverbal Communication
Exclusionary attitudes—prejudice toward outgroups and opposition to policies that promote their well-being—are presenting challenges to democratic societies worldwide. Drawing on insights from psychology, we argue that non-judgmentally exchanging narratives in interpersonal conversations can facilitate durable reductions in exclusionary attitudes. We support this argument with evidence from three pre-registered field experiments targeting exclusionary attitudes toward unauthorized immigrants and transgender people. In these experiments, 230 canvassers conversed with 6,869 voters across 7 US locations. In Experiment 1, face-to-face conversations deploying arguments alone had no effects on voters’ exclusionary immigration policy or prejudicial attitudes, but otherwise identical conversations also including the non-judgmental exchange of narratives durably reduced exclusionary attitudes for at least four months (d = 0.08). Experiments 2 and 3, targeting transphobia, replicate these findings and support the scalability of this strategy (ds = 0.08, 0.04). Non-judgmentally exchanging narratives can help overcome the resistance to persuasion often encountered in discussions of these contentious topics.
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