Home    Service    Jobs    Newsletter    Company    Productsearch    eBooks    Shopping cart    Deutsch
Books | Sociology | Available titles | Intergroup Relations in Post Apartheid South Africa
 

ChemistryViews

MaterialsViews

wileyPLUS

WileyOnline Library

Wiley JobNetwork

Wiley STMData

Ernst & Sohn

more >>
Finchilescu, Gillian / Tredoux, Colin (eds.)
Intergroup Relations in Post Apartheid South Africa
Change, and Obstacles to Change
Journal of Social Issues

1. Edition July 2010
35.90 Euro
2010. 200 Pages, Softcover
ISBN 978-1-4443-3818-8 - John Wiley & Sons



Buy now

Print


Detailed description
This volume brings together research that has investigated change and obstacles to change in intergroup relations in South Africa.
* Reflects on theories of intergroup behavior that are current in the international literature.
* Highlights issues of interest when considering a transformation in which the formerly subordinate group becomes the politically dominant majority.

From the contents
OVERVIEW AND INTRODUCTION.

1 The Changing Landscape of Intergroup Relations in South Africa.

CHANGES IN IDENTITIES AND ATTITUDES.

2. Emerging Patterns of Social Identification in Post apartheid South Africa.

3. Racial Reconciliation in South Africa: Interracial Contact and Changes over Time.

4. Racial Contact and Change in South Africa.

MEDIATORS OF CONTACT.

5. Mediators of the Contact-Prejudice Relation amongst South African Students on Four University Campuses.

6. The Impact of Cross group Friendships in South Africa: Affective Mediators and Multigroup Comparisons.

7. Intergroup Anxiety in Interracial Interaction: The Role of Prejudice and Metastereotypes.

CONTACT IN DESEGREGATED EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS.

8. The Reconstitution of Privilege: Integration in Former White Schools in South Africa.

9. The Spaces between Us: A Spatial Analysis of Informal Segregation at a South African University.

CHALLENGES FOR THE CONTACT HYPOTHESIS.

10. Contact Theory: Too Timid for "Race" and Racism.

11. A Paradox of Integration? Interracial Contact, Prejudice Reduction, and Perceptions of Racial Discrimination.

AFTERWORD.

Commentary: South African Contributions to the Study of Intergroup Relations.

 




 

        

Tell a friend          RSS Feeds         Print-Version         Sitemap

©2013 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA - Provider
http://www.wiley-vch.de - mailto: info@wiley-vch.de
Data Protection