CONTACT HYPOTHESIS
Favorable conditions of contact reduce prejudice and increase social harmony
Regular and Frequent Contact
Balance of In-group and Out-group Members
Potential for Friendship
Variety of Situations and Settings
Free of Competition
Important to Participants
Equal Status of Group Members
Interaction with Non-stereotypic Group Members
Organized around Cooperation on a Shared Goal
Normatively and Institutionally Supported
Free of Negative Emotions
“…one of psychology’s most effective strategies for improving intergroup
relations” (Dovidio et al., 2003, p. 5).
Integrated Education Movement in Northern Ireland - Catholic and Protestant
Children
Common Curriculum
Multiple Paths of Contact
Positive Impact
In-group Identity
Out-group Attitudes
Forgiveness
Social Cohesion
Criticisms of Contact
Utopianism
Gap between Ideal and Everyday Contact
e.g., Black and
White Americans
Real Contexts of
Interaction Are not Studied
Implications for
Overcoming Conflict Unclear
Neglect of Group Members’ Perceptions about Contact
Imposed, Generic Measurement of Contact
e.g., “Is the contact
you have with Muslim people competitive (1) or cooperative (7)?”
Limits the Capacity to Evaluate Constructive
versus Negative Contact
Lay Perceptions of Contact May Maintain
Conflict
e.g., White South
Africans’ Meaning of Residential Desegregation
Individualism
Contact May Improve Collective Tolerance
by Reducing Personal Prejudice
Contact May Heighten Conflict When
Perceived as a Collective Threat
Individual Perceptions May not Generalize
Individual Tolerance and Collective
Conflict May Coexist
New Directions
Study Ordinary versus Contrived Contact
Black versus White Shoppers
Understanding Impediments for Social
Change
Substitute Emic for Generic Understanding of Contact
UK Muslims’ perceptions of integration
Implications for Promoting Successful
Contact
Change Collective Rationalization for Structural Advantages
versus Individual Beliefs
Intimacy does not Preclude Oppression
Conduct Comparative Analyses to Clarify How Contact Succeeds
or Fails
Group Relations in Desegregated Settings
with Different Outcomes
e.g., “White flight”
Relativity of Contact Experiences for
Different Groups
e.g., Desegregation
that Values White Culture
DISCUSSION:
➢ Are human beings “hard-wired” for tribalism and, therefore,
is intergroup conflict inevitable?
➢ What are the benefits to groups, either minority of majority,
in remaining separate?
➢ What is the difference between maintaining a separate
group identify versus being separated from the majority?