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Effects of intergroup contact on attitudes of Chinese urban residents to migrant workers

Version 2 2024-06-13, 08:57
Version 1 2014-11-27, 14:52
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 08:57 authored by I Nielsen, C Nyland, R Smyth, M Zhang, CJ Zhu
One consequence of China's marketisation has been the emergence of a 'floating population' - rural Chinese who migrate to China's cities to work. Many urbanites have negative attitudes towards such migrants. To understand how these negative attitudes might be ameliorated, the paper employs Allport's influential contact hypothesis to investigate whether urbanite-migrant friendships affect attitudes. More negative attitudes were observed among males and older urbanites. There was no effect of simply knowing a migrant, supporting Allport's thesis that non-intimate contact is not sufficient to affect attitudes. Friendship alone did not influence attitudes, but interaction effects were detected between having migrant friends and each of age, income and education. Negative attitudes were reduced among urbanites in older, higher-income and higher-education groups if they had a migrant friend. © 2006 The Editors of Urban Studies.

History

Journal

Urban studies

Volume

43

Pagination

475-490

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0042-0980

eISSN

1360-063X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, Sage Publications

Issue

3

Publisher

Sage Publications