Does personal contact with ethnic minorities affect anti-immigrant sentiments? Evidence from a field experiment

Publication Year
2017

Type

Journal Article
Abstract

This article explores the causal effect of personal contact with ethnic minorities on majority members’ views on immigration, immigrants’ work ethics, and support for lower social assistance benefits to immigrants than to natives. Exogenous variation in personal contact is obtained by randomising soldiers into different rooms during the basic training period for conscripts in the Norwegian Army's North Brigade. Based on contact theory of majority–minority relations, the study spells out why the army can be regarded as an ideal contextual setting for exposure to reduce negative views on minorities. The study finds a substantive effect of contact on views on immigrants’ work ethics, but small and insignificant effects on support for welfare dualism, as well as on views on whether immigration makes Norway a better place in which to live. © 2017 European Consortium for Political Research

Journal
European Journal of Political Research
Volume
56
Pages
703–722
Type of Article
Journal Article
Full text

Open access via the link provided.

Type of Prejudice/Bias
Country
Method
Setting