The density of social networks moderates effects of intergroup contact

Publication date

2016-11-01

Authors

Stark, TobiasORCID 0000-0002-3163-5776ISNI 0000000394155531

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

This study tests how the density of the social network in which intergroup contact takes place might affect the extent to which contact improves intergroup attitudes. Having contact with more outgroup members in dense social networks, in which everybody knows each other, may reinforce contact's positive effect. In this case, outgroup contact is shared with ingroup members, which suggests positive ingroup norms toward the outgroup. Alternatively, more contact in denser networks may improve intergroup attitudes less because density may increase subtyping or reduce the salience of ethnic group memberships. These competing hypotheses are tested among white American adults in a nonprobability online sample (N = 305) and in a representative national sample (N = 1270). In both studies, contact is associated with more positive attitudes toward racial outgroups but the positive contact effect is weakened if that contact takes place in a denser social network.

Keywords

Intergroup contact, Network density, Prejudice, Social networks, Taverne, Social Psychology, Business and International Management, Sociology and Political Science

Citation

Stark, T H 2016, 'The density of social networks moderates effects of intergroup contact', International Journal of Intercultural Relations, vol. 55, pp. 133-147. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijintrel.2016.10.004