Full Citation
Title: Out-Group Threat or Inter-Group Contact Theory? Out-Group Attitudes and Interaction in Times of Diversity Growth
Citation Type: Dissertation/Thesis
Publication Year: 2018
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Abstract: Much attention has been devoted to the presumed negative effect of diversity growth on various dimensions of attitudes and interaction between different racial and ethnic groups. However, whether the claims hold true is unclear- there is a considerable controversy over the impact of changing diversity on societal behavior. With ongoing migration, the United States are becoming more and more ethnically diverse but a sound debate on racial and ethnic composition and its consequences for inter-group interactions and attitudes towards others has not yet been possible due to a lack of causally-oriented panel studies. In this study, two important features are tested: on the one hand, friendships to racial or ethnic out-group members (Chapter IV), and on the other, attitudes towards these people (Chapter V). To my knowledge, this study deploys one of the first U.S. panel designs measuring diversity effect using two waves of panel data from the Portraits of American Life Survey (2006-2012). Using different measures of inter-group socializing and attitudes towards out-group members, this study explores whether changes in community diversity lead to changes in outgroup attitudes and contact across racial lines. This study distinguishes whether the contextual effects take place on the tract or city level, and whether individuals experiencing increases in diversity initially lived in low, medium or high heterogeneity. Furthermore, separate results are presented for non-Hispanic white and non-white respondents. The analysis on attitudes differentiates whether the treatment (the change rate in diversity) is due to changes in neighborhood composition for stayers and or to neighborhood changes for movers.
Url: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3479&context=gc_etds
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Authors: Jacoby, Annette
Institution: The City University of New York
Department: Sociology
Advisor: Richard Alba
Degree: Doctor of Philosophy
Publisher Location: New York, NY
Pages: 240
Data Collections: IPUMS NHGIS
Topics: Housing and Segregation, Race and Ethnicity
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