Improving intergroup relations between Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland via E-contact Author Fiona White, Rhiannon Turner, Stefano Verrelli, Lauren Harvey, Jeffrey Hanna Publication Year 2018 Type Journal Article Abstract Northern Ireland is characterised by extensive segregation between its predominantly Catholic and Protestant communities. With the aim of overcoming this segregation, the current study experimentally evaluated the effectiveness of electronic or E-contact as a novel indirect contact and prejudice-reduction strategy. Here, Catholic and Protestant participants were not required to meet physically but were involved in a collaborative and goal-orientated online interaction with a member of the other community. As predicted, E-contact improved both Catholics’ and Protestants’ outgroup attitudes via improved contact expectancies and reduced intergroup anxiety. These findings provide support for the contemporary role of online interactions in actively overcoming the physical and psychological barriers that often prevent prejudice reduction in segregated communities. © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Keywords anxiety, computer-mediated communication, intergroup contact, religion Journal European Journal of Social Psychology Volume 49 Pages 429–438 Type of Article Journal Article URL External link to reference DOI 10.1002/ejsp.2515 Full text Open access via the link provided. Type of Prejudice/Bias Religion Country United Kingdom Method Lab Setting College/University Online Google ScholarDOIBibTeX