When imagining intergroup contact mobilizes collective action: The perspective of disadvantaged and advantaged groups Author Sabahat Bagci, Sofia Stathi, Zeynep Piyale Publication Year 2019 Type Journal Article Abstract The current studies aimed to reveal the potential role of imagined intergroup contact on collective action tendencies within a context of intergroup conflict. Study 1 (disadvantaged Kurds, N = 80) showed that imagined contact increased collective action tendencies and this effect was mediated by increased perceived discrimination and ethnic identification. Study 2 (advantaged Turks, N = 127) demonstrated that imagined contact also directly increased collective action tendencies, as well as perceived discrimination and relative deprivation among the advantaged group. No significant mediation emerged. At the same time, in line with literature, imagined contact led only the advantaged group members to display more positive outgroup attitudes. Findings suggest that in settings where ingroup identities and conflict are salient, imagined contact may not readily undermine motivation for social change among group members. Keywords imagined contact, collective action, discrimination, identification, conflict Journal International Journal of Intercultural Relations Volume 69 Pages 32–43 Type of Article Journal Article URL External link to reference DOI 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2018.12.003 Full text Open access via the link provided. Type of Prejudice/Bias Race/Ethnicity Country Turkey Method Lab Setting College/University Google ScholarDOIBibTeX