Casual Contact and Ethnic Bias: Experimental Evidence from Afghanistan

What determines how contact with the out-group affects behavior? We show experimentally that casual interethnic contact in a postconflict society can increase ethnic bias. Day laborers in Kabul, Afghanistan, were equally altruistic toward their in-group and their out-group when out-group members wer...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Journal of politics Vol. 81; no. 3; pp. 1028 - 1042
Main Authors Condra, Luke N., Linardi, Sera
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Chicago The University of Chicago Press 01.07.2019
University of Chicago Press
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Summary:What determines how contact with the out-group affects behavior? We show experimentally that casual interethnic contact in a postconflict society can increase ethnic bias. Day laborers in Kabul, Afghanistan, were equally altruistic toward their in-group and their out-group when out-group members were not physically present. When out-group members were physically present in an environment where no guidance for interaction or explicit incentives for cooperation were given, out-group altruism was decreasing in time among those who did not speak the out-group’s language, suggesting that this contact highlights differences in descent-based attributes and increases in-group identification. We provide evidence for a psychological mechanism leading to in-group bias in casual, everyday interactions in a postconflict society, with implications for studying the nature of ethnic bias in political and economic behavior. Results suggest that interethnic interaction does not automatically improve ethnic relationships, and attention should be paid to the conditions under which interaction occurs.
ISSN:0022-3816
1468-2508
DOI:10.1086/703380