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Towards a habit-rupture model of intergroup contact in everyday settings

  • Stefania Paolini
  • , John Dixon
  • , Patrick F. Kotzur
  • , Maria Therese Friehs
  • , Chloe Bracegirdle
  • , Aaron Lauterbach
  • , Julia Köbrich
  • , Sylvie Graf
  • , Mathias Kauff
  • , Anna Stefaniak
  • , Stephen C. Wright
  • , Fiona K. Barlow
  • , Kathryn Luebbering
  • , Jake Harwood
    • Durham University
    • Open University Milton Keynes
    • FernUniversität in Hagen
    • University of Surrey
    • University of Oxford
    • German Institute of Global and Area Studies
    • Utrecht University
    • Czech Academy of Sciences
    • MSH Medical School Hamburg
    • University of St Andrews
    • Carleton University
    • Simon Fraser University
    • University of Queensland
    • Goldsmiths, University of London
    • University of Arizona

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    2 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    According to intergroup contact theory, meaningful interactions between members of different social identity groups can lead to decreases in prejudice. However, the literature on intergroup contact has generally emphasized contact-based interventions that involve positive contact experiences in highly controlled environments like research laboratories or classrooms, or infrequent intimate intergroup contact experiences, like intergroup friendships. In this Perspective, we review the literature on how intergroup contact manifests in everyday settings, which challenges established views that contact is readily available, positive and leads to consistently positive within-person changes. We describe how variations in contact valence and environmental affordances for self-selection influence individual- and macro-level segregation dynamics, which create conditions for stable trajectories of contact and intergroup bias, or contact habits. We then propose a habit–rupture model of contact, according to which changes in intergroup relations through lifespan and macro-level disruptions act as ruptures, leading to the development of new contact habits. Considering contact and its effects through a habit and rupture lens identifies realistic and ecologically valid opportunities to apply intergroup contact in the service of the social good.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)136-151
    Number of pages16
    JournalNature Reviews Psychology
    Volume5
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Feb 2026

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