TY - JOUR
T1 - Opening the black box of contact
T2 - Unravelling the ways through which positive contact is imagined in a post-conflict context
AU - Ioannou, Maria
AU - Panagiotou, Elisavet
N1 - Funding Information:
We would like to thank Irini Kadianaki and Maria Avraamidou for helping with the interpretation of our data and for their useful suggestions on the manuscript. We also thank the anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Authors. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2020/11/1
Y1 - 2020/11/1
N2 - While there is growing support for the prejudice-reduction effects of imagined contact, knowledge of the content of imagery in imagined contact studies remains scarce. This qualitative study aims to address this gap by unravelling the ways of imagining an intergroup encounter that is indeed positive. Our data consist of the imagined contact stories of 43 participants in two imagined contact studies conducted in Cyprus, a post-conflict context characterised by low levels of contact because of long-standing division across ethnic lines. Our analysis yielded four themes corresponding to four ways of construing positive contact: imagining a good Other, a similar Other, an inferior Other, as well as imagining successfully overcoming obstacles emerging before or during contact. While participants came up with ways to imagine positive contact that are consistent with intergroup contact literature (e.g., intergroup similarities, decategorisation), a closer look at the findings reveals that in composing a positive intergroup experience, participants made use of dysfunctional stereotypes and conflict-perpetuating narratives whose objective is to protect their superior status and to ensure their safety during contact. The findings serve as a word of caution for imagined contact as a prejudice-reduction intervention and they also attest to the importance of deeply knowing the psychological composition of the groups which (imagined) contact interventions typically aim to tackle.
AB - While there is growing support for the prejudice-reduction effects of imagined contact, knowledge of the content of imagery in imagined contact studies remains scarce. This qualitative study aims to address this gap by unravelling the ways of imagining an intergroup encounter that is indeed positive. Our data consist of the imagined contact stories of 43 participants in two imagined contact studies conducted in Cyprus, a post-conflict context characterised by low levels of contact because of long-standing division across ethnic lines. Our analysis yielded four themes corresponding to four ways of construing positive contact: imagining a good Other, a similar Other, an inferior Other, as well as imagining successfully overcoming obstacles emerging before or during contact. While participants came up with ways to imagine positive contact that are consistent with intergroup contact literature (e.g., intergroup similarities, decategorisation), a closer look at the findings reveals that in composing a positive intergroup experience, participants made use of dysfunctional stereotypes and conflict-perpetuating narratives whose objective is to protect their superior status and to ensure their safety during contact. The findings serve as a word of caution for imagined contact as a prejudice-reduction intervention and they also attest to the importance of deeply knowing the psychological composition of the groups which (imagined) contact interventions typically aim to tackle.
KW - conflict
KW - Cyprus
KW - imagined contact
KW - prejudice
KW - qualitative analysis
KW - CROSS-GROUP FRIENDSHIPS
U2 - 10.1002/casp.2465
DO - 10.1002/casp.2465
M3 - Article
SN - 1052-9284
VL - 30
SP - 660
EP - 672
JO - Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology
JF - Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology
IS - 6
ER -