VoxDev Development Economics

S7 Ep12: Can contact between groups reduce prejudice?

Mar 11, 2026
Matt Lowe, assistant professor at the Vancouver School of Economics and researcher on intergroup relations, reviews decades of research on bringing groups together. He explains how early findings were inflated by publication bias. He summarizes new pre-registered experiments showing real but much smaller effects of contact. He discusses policy implications, the role of study design, and what rigorous future tests should target.
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INSIGHT

Field Experiments Show Mixed Real World Effects

  • A wave of randomized field experiments starting about a decade ago produced mixed and often limited effects of contact in real conflict contexts.
  • Examples include vocational training in Nigeria and football teams in Iraq showing behavior gains inside interventions but limited generalization.
INSIGHT

Why Old Contact Studies Overstated Effects

  • Two major methodological problems skew earlier contact literature: identification (selection/reverse causality) and reporting/file-drawer bias.
  • Pre-analysis plans and experiments reduce these biases and give more credible estimates.
INSIGHT

Large Set Of Pre-Registered Experiments Exists

  • Matt Lowe identified 41 pre-registered intergroup contact experiments covering ~40,000 participants, mostly recent and largely non-overlapping with older meta-analyses.
  • This sample size yields precise estimates and is large enough to reassess typical effects.
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