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Summary SLK 320(B) Chapter 19: Race and intergroup relationships

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Summary of chapter 19 (race & intergroup relationships) - Chapter covered in Part D: Themes & contexts of community psychology.









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Uploaded on
November 1, 2018
Number of pages
4
Written in
2017/2018
Type
Summary

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PART D: THEMES & CONTEXTS OF COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOG Y

CHAPTER 19: RACE AND INTERGROUP RELATIONSHIPS
 Using contact theory to study & intervene in situations to improve intergroup relationships 
Progressive psychologists working for social change in a racially oppressive society developed Contact Theory

HISTORICAL CONTEXT OF CONTACT THEORY
 20th century: African Americans in Southern states lived in system of apartheid with a segregated schooling system
 Civil rights lawyers & social scientists challenged segregation in BROWN vs. BOARD of EDUCATION case
 Psychological evidence persuaded supreme court justices to stop school segregation
 Psychologists had to show court whether it was possible to desegregate schools immediately/first change prejudice attitudes so
social conflict wouldn’t result
 Contact theory developed as psychologists obtained evidence showing intergroup contact itself can reduce prejudice
 1955: supreme court mandated racially segregated schools be eliminated
 The ruling set scene for 1960s USA Civil Rights Movement & gave impetus to social psychological research on intergroup contact


 Allport’s 1954 book ‘The Nature of Prejudice’ championed intergroup contact as a tool for prejudice reduction
 Text was culmination of applied work by psychologists to effect social change = in doing so the discipline of
social psychology was changed
 Book changed focus of study from the prejudice target to the prejudiced perceiver = question how ‘they’ differ
from ‘us’ & how ‘their’ difference is problematic was changed regarding such perceptions as problematic
 Allport’s Contact Hypothesis suggested intergroup contact would only reduce prejudice under optimal conditions:
 Prejudice may be reduced by equal status contact between majority/minority groups in pursuit of common goals
 Effect is greatly enhanced if contact is sanctioned by institutional supports (ex. law, custom/local atmosphere)
that leads to perception of common interests/common humanity between members of the 2 groups
 Yinger & Simpson 1973: prejudice is sometimes explained as result of the lack of contact with members of a minority
group & sometimes explained as result of the presence of such contact
 Intergroup contact could produce both positive/negative outcomes = aim of contact research has been to uncover
the social psychological conditions that lead to favourable intergroup contact
 Fostering positive attitudes & reducing conflict potential include intergroup contact characterised as:
 Between groups of equal status
 Occurring regularly/frequently
 Having a balance of in-group & out-group members
 Being intimate enough for potential friendship development
 Being cooperative or (at least) free from competition
 Being normatively/institutionally supported
 Studies shown increased intergroup contact is associated with decreased levels of prejudice
 Contact interventions are a vital tool community psychologists can use to plan interventions to reduce intergroup
conflict in organisational, institutional & community settings


 Various contact models used as interventions in conflict situations 

a. De-categorisation Model (DCM)
 Contact interventions seeking to create intergroup friendships seen as subscribing to DCM of social change
 Proposes categorisation of people into distinct groups can result in bias = category salience should thus be
reduced in intergroup contact situations
 Typically attempt to create intergroup situations where Allport’s (1954) optimal contact conditions apply = namely
cooperation, common goals, intimacy & equal status
 These situations create opportunities to know out-group members as individuals & facilitate friendship
formation/reduction of prejudice/conflict

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