Journal article

From segregation to intergroup contact and back: Using experiments and simulation to understand the bidirectional link


Authors listSchlüter, E; Ullrich, J; Glenz, A; Schmidt, P

Publication year2018

Pages17-32

JournalEuropean Journal of Social Psychology

Volume number48

Issue number1

ISSN0046-2772

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2284

PublisherWiley


Abstract
Research on intergroup contact has mostly viewed desegregation as a necessary condition for contact to unfold its power to reduce prejudice. Through residential and school choices, however, prejudice also contributes to segregation. To shed light on this bidirectional link, we conducted two survey-based experiments with stratified quota samples of German adults. In Study 1, respondents with less contact and more prejudice indicated a lower likelihood of renting an apartment in a neighborhood with a larger proportion of minority members, although housing quality and crime rate were held constant. In Study 2, similar results were obtained for the likelihood of enrolling their child at a school with a larger proportion of minority students. Building on these results in a computer simulation, we find that because contact only reduces prejudice, but does not produce pro-minority preferences, spontaneous desegregation is unlikely to occur even under the most favorable structural and economic conditions.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleSchlüter, E., Ullrich, J., Glenz, A. and Schmidt, P. (2018) From segregation to intergroup contact and back: Using experiments and simulation to understand the bidirectional link, European Journal of Social Psychology, 48(1), pp. 17-32. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2284

APA Citation styleSchlüter, E., Ullrich, J., Glenz, A., & Schmidt, P. (2018). From segregation to intergroup contact and back: Using experiments and simulation to understand the bidirectional link. European Journal of Social Psychology. 48(1), 17-32. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejsp.2284


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 14:03