15/06/2004
UU research probes influences on sectarian prejudice
Having a friend who has a friend from the ‘other side’ can reduce levels of sectarian prejudice among individuals in Northern Ireland.
This is according to new research from the University of Ulster carried out in the context of inter-community relations in Northern Ireland.
In two surveys, one with over 300 university students and the other with over 700 randomly selected members of the Northern Ireland population, the researchers, led by Professor Ed Cairns, revealed that just knowing that your friend has a friend from the other community can reduce your prejudice levels - and anxiety about encounters with the ‘other side'.
In a ground-breaking study just published in a leading American scientific journal, an international team of researchers from the University of Ulster and the University of Oxford, found evidence to suggest that even our friends’ friends may have a subtle influence on us.
This study could have important policy implications for cross-community work in Northern Ireland, say the authors.
Prof Cairns said: “We all know that we can be influenced by our friends in various subtle ways. But what about our friends friends - that is, people we have never even met?
“Our study suggests that, for example, even one child living in a segregated neighbourhood who attends an integrated school or a cross-community workshop could be having a positive ripple effect on the sectarian attitudes of his or her friends when he returns to his home patch."
Also, according to Professor Cairns, research such as this is beginning for the first time to tell us not only whether cross-community contact is effective as a way of reducing prejudice, but to reveal the psychological process that underlie when it works and how it works.
“As we learn more about what goes on in these prejudice reducing contact situations we can ensure that scientifically designed cross-community work will play a growing role in contributing to greater peace and prosperity in the Northern Ireland of the future,” he concluded.
(MB)
This is according to new research from the University of Ulster carried out in the context of inter-community relations in Northern Ireland.
In two surveys, one with over 300 university students and the other with over 700 randomly selected members of the Northern Ireland population, the researchers, led by Professor Ed Cairns, revealed that just knowing that your friend has a friend from the other community can reduce your prejudice levels - and anxiety about encounters with the ‘other side'.
In a ground-breaking study just published in a leading American scientific journal, an international team of researchers from the University of Ulster and the University of Oxford, found evidence to suggest that even our friends’ friends may have a subtle influence on us.
This study could have important policy implications for cross-community work in Northern Ireland, say the authors.
Prof Cairns said: “We all know that we can be influenced by our friends in various subtle ways. But what about our friends friends - that is, people we have never even met?
“Our study suggests that, for example, even one child living in a segregated neighbourhood who attends an integrated school or a cross-community workshop could be having a positive ripple effect on the sectarian attitudes of his or her friends when he returns to his home patch."
Also, according to Professor Cairns, research such as this is beginning for the first time to tell us not only whether cross-community contact is effective as a way of reducing prejudice, but to reveal the psychological process that underlie when it works and how it works.
“As we learn more about what goes on in these prejudice reducing contact situations we can ensure that scientifically designed cross-community work will play a growing role in contributing to greater peace and prosperity in the Northern Ireland of the future,” he concluded.
(MB)
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