When do "enemies" become friends?
Join online: https://berkeley.zoom.us/j/98137401336
Having close relationships with outgroup members is an especially powerful form of intergroup contact that can reduce prejudice. Rather than examine the consequences of forming close outgroup relationships, which has previously been studied as part of intergroup contact theory, we examine how outgroup relationshipsrelative to ingroup relationshipsform in the first place. Our sample is Jewish Israeli and Palestinian teenagers attending a 3-week summer camp at Seeds of Peace, one of the largest conflict transformation programs in the world. We specifically tested how being assigned to share an activity group (e.g., bunk, table, dialogue group) influenced relationship formation among outgroup pairs (Jewish IsraeliPalestinian) compared with ingroup pairs (IsraeliIsraeli, PalestinianPalestinian). Existing research offers competing theories for whether propinquity is more impactful for the formation of ingroup or outgroup relationships; here, we found propinquity was significantly more impactful for outgroup relationships. In other words, we found evidence that structured, meaningful engagement can counteract homophily. Furthermore, at least in this setting, propinquity proved to be an even better predictor of outgroup (vs. ingroup) relationship formation than that pairs initial outgroup attitudes. We discuss theoretical and practical implications for intergroup processes and relationship formation.