Racial composition of social settings,interracial friendship,and whites’ attitudes toward interracial marriage |
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Authors: | Samuel L. Perry |
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Affiliation: | Department of Sociology, University of Chicago, 1126 E. 59th St., Chicago, IL 60637, USA |
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Abstract: | This study examines the effect that the racial composition of neighborhoods, workplaces, congregations, and friendships has on whites’ attitudes toward interracial marriage with blacks, Latinos, and Asians. Utilizing survey data drawn from a national probability sample, ordered logit regression models are estimated in order to (1) determine the effect of the racial composition of neighborhoods, workplaces, and congregations on white intermarriage attitudes, net of sociodemographic and ideological controls and (2) test for a mediating effect of interracial friendship. Greater presence of blacks, Latinos, or Asians in neighborhoods and congregations of whites predicts favorable attitudes among whites toward interracial marriage with each respective racial group. A higher proportion of Latinos in the workplace also predicts support for racial exogamy with Latinos. Many of these effects, however, are reduced when interracial friendship is included in models, suggesting that the effect of interracial contact on intermarriage attitudes is mediated by whether or not whites develop interracial friendships within settings of cross-race interaction. |
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Keywords: | Racial attitudes Contact hypothesis Interracial marriage Interracial friendship Social distance |
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