Timothy McGovern’s research while affiliated with University of California, Santa Barbara and other places

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Publications (1)


Attitudes toward the culturally different: The role of intercultural communication barriers, affective responses, consensual stereotypes, and perceived threat
  • Article

November 2002

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11,607 Reads

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263 Citations

International Journal of Intercultural Relations

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Timothy McGovern

The psychological impact of intercultural communication barriers on intergroup attitudes was examined by testing a model of global attitudes toward the culturally different. The prejudice literature has largely overlooked the role of intercultural communication and intercultural communication in determining people's evaluative orientation toward ethnolinguistic outgroups. Intercultural communication emotions (negative affect associated with perceived linguistic and cultural barriers) were investigated as determinants of prejudice, in conjunction with causal factors that are widely recognized as central to intergroup judgments (consensual stereotypes, intergroup anxiety, and realistic and symbolic/cultural threats [Stephan & Stephan Int. J. Intercultural Relations 20 (1996) 409]). Regression analyses indicated that intercultural communication emotions were strongly and uniquely related to prejudice toward a culturally diverse outgroup: foreign students. Consistent with the contact hypothesis [Allport (1954) The nature of prejudice, Addison-Wesley], moderated regression analyses indicated that the structure of intergroup attitudes was modified by social contact with the international community. Implications for intergroup relations and international educational exchange are discussed.

Citations (1)


... Prejudice has been defined as a negative cognitive or affective response towards exogroups and their members and plays a relevant role in creating or preserving hierarchical intergroup relations (Dovidio et al., 2010;Yzerbyt & Demoulin, 2010). Several studies have shown that the attitudes of members of host societies towards multiculturalism are negatively related to the degree to which newcomers are perceived as competing for material or symbolic resources (Sirlopú & Van Oudenhoven, 2013;Spencer-Rodgers & McGovern, 2002;Stephan et al., 2005;Vedder et al., 2016;Velasco González et al., 2008;Ward & Masgoret, 2008). ...

Reference:

Spanish Translation, Adaptation and Psychometric Analysis of a Short Version of the Intercultural Sensitivity Scale in Chilean Public Workers
Attitudes toward the culturally different: The role of intercultural communication barriers, affective responses, consensual stereotypes, and perceived threat
  • Citing Article
  • November 2002

International Journal of Intercultural Relations