This volume highlights the most notable recent developments in intergroup contact theory, demonstrating its vitality and its capacity for reinvention. It includes coverage of a number of previously under-researched domains which underline and extend the full potential of the field.
This volume highlights the most notable recent developments in intergroup contact theory, demonstrating its vitality and its capacity for reinvention. It includes coverage of a number of previously under-researched domains which underline and extend the full potential of the field.
Loris Vezzali is Associate Professor at the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy, where he teaches Social and Group Psychology. His main research interests concern intergroup relations and, in particular, strategies for the reduction of explicit and implicit prejudice. Sofia Stathi is Senior Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Greenwich, UK, where she teaches Social and Cultural Psychology and Social Cognition. Her research focuses mainly on intergroup relations, categorization processes, and multiculturalism.
Inhaltsangabe
List of contributors. Introduction - The Present and the future of the contact hypothesis, and the need for integrating research fields 1. Individual differences in intergroup contact propensity and prejudice reduction 2. The influence of direct and extended contact on the development of acculturation preferences among majority members 3. The irony of harmony: Past and new developments 4. A temporally integrated model of intergroup contact and threat (TIMICAT) 5. Investigating positive and negative intergroup contact: Rectifying a long-standing positivity bias in the literature 6. The extended intergroup contact hypothesis: State of the art and future developments 7. A future focus for imagined contact: Advances in and beyond intergroup relations 8. Intergroup contact among children 9. Concluding thoughts: The past, present and future of research on the contact hypothesis. Index
List of contributors. Introduction - The Present and the future of the contact hypothesis, and the need for integrating research fields 1. Individual differences in intergroup contact propensity and prejudice reduction 2. The influence of direct and extended contact on the development of acculturation preferences among majority members 3. The irony of harmony: Past and new developments 4. A temporally integrated model of intergroup contact and threat (TIMICAT) 5. Investigating positive and negative intergroup contact: Rectifying a long-standing positivity bias in the literature 6. The extended intergroup contact hypothesis: State of the art and future developments 7. A future focus for imagined contact: Advances in and beyond intergroup relations 8. Intergroup contact among children 9. Concluding thoughts: The past, present and future of research on the contact hypothesis. Index
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