Pandemic and prejudice: Revisiting Bogardus’s social distance concept in a time of COVID-19

Ellen Shi, Michael J. Platow*, Daniel Bar-Tal, Martha Augoustinos, Russell Spears, Dirk Van Rooy

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)
58 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

This study examined when the realistic threat of COVID-19 leads to prejudicial social distancing. American participants reported social distancing preferences from Chinese or Italian people (out-group target) after viewing increasing or decreasing COVID-19 case numbers (threat level) in China or Italy (threat relevance). On the Bogardus Social Distance Scale, there was support for a disease avoidance hypothesis: greater social distancing preferences were expressed under higher than under lower relevant threats. Responses on a bespoke COVID-19 Social Distance Scale, however, supported an a priori prejudice hypothesis: greater social distancing preferences were expressed toward a Chinese than toward an Italian out-group. Moreover, responses on a separate bespoke Modern Social Distance Scale supported a complex prejudice hypothesis: greater social distancing preferences were expressed toward Chinese than toward Italian out-groups under higher than under lower threat, regardless of threat relevance. These findings suggest that the threat of COVID-19 may enable prejudice expression accompanied by the rationale of disease avoidance.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)239-255
Number of pages17
JournalGroup Processes and Intergroup Relations
Volume27
Issue number2
Early online date9-Nov-2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb-2024

Keywords

  • prejudice
  • realistic threat
  • social distance

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