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Connolly, P. (2000) What now for the contact
hypothesis? Towards a new research agenda, Race Ethnicity and
Education, 3(2): 169-193.
This article begins with a review of recent research on the Contact
Hypothesis. It will be shown that the literature in this area has
become essentially closed and self-referential where the core political
and theoretical premises that underpin the Hypothesis have been
taken for granted and the debates have therefore become restricted
simply to how best to measure the influence of inter-group contact.
One of the key reasons for this is the lack of critical engagement
with the Contact Hypothesis from those of a more structuralist and/or
‘radical’ perspective. This may be because the individualistic
focus of the Hypothesis is seen from such a perspective as largely
irrelevant to addressing racial and ethnic divisions and/or because
it may be felt that to engage with the concept is to give it undue
legitimacy. It will be argued in this article, however, that the
wholesale dismissal of the Contact Hypothesis is a little premature.
Just as recent research on racial and ethnic divisions has drawn
attention to the way in which such divisions exist at a number of
layers within the social formation – from the structural,
political and ideological through to the sub-cultural, interactional
and biographical – so must any initiatives aimed at addressing
these divisions be similarly ‘multi-layered’ in their
approach. However, it will be argued that for research to help inform
specific strategies at the interactional level, there needs to be
a significant change in the way that inter-group contact, and the
Contact Hypothesis more generally, is studied. The article will
‘model out’ one potentially fruitful way in which such
research can develop through the use of an ethnographic case study
involving a cross-community scheme arranged for Protestant and Catholic
children in Northern Ireland.
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