Bristol Conversations in Education - Examining Contact Processes and Outcomes in Socially Divided Contexts

9 May 2023, 3.00 PM - 9 May 2023, 4.00 PM

Professor Linda Tropp (Professor of Social Psychology, University of Massachusetts Amherst)

This is an IN-PERSON EVENT: Please find more information at the end of your order confirmation email. Some areas may require UCard access. Room 4.10 35 Berkeley Square Bristol BS8 1JA

This event is part of the School of Education's Bristol Conversations in Education research seminar series. These seminars are free and open to the public.

Hosted by: The School of Education and School of Psychological Sciences, University of Bristol

Speaker: Professor Linda Tropp (Professor of Social Psychology, University of Massachusetts Amherst)

Based on 75 years of scholarship, intergroup contact has long been recognized as one of the most promising pathways to reduce prejudice and improve relations between groups. Yet for most of its history, the contact research literature focused principally on how interactions across group lines could help to reduce the prejudices of advantaged groups toward disadvantaged and minoritized groups, and within relatively stable contexts of social relations. In recent decades, interest has grown—among researchers and practitioners alike—in understanding how contact functions in contexts of social division, where group status positions are contested and where contact strategies are often used to ease intergroup tensions, foster social cohesion, and build prospects for reconciliation in the face of civil conflicts. In this talk, Tropp will present research examples that reflect these trends, along with field studies from a range of societal contexts, to provide a broader lens on the relevance and applicability of intergroup contact theory and research in divided societies.

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Contact information

ed-events@bristol.ac.uk

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