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Stanciu, A., Vauclair, C.-M. & Rodda, N. (2019). Evidence for stereotype accommodation as an expression of immigrants’ socio-cognitive adaptation. International Journal of Intercultural Relations. 72, 76-86
A. Stanciu et al., "Evidence for stereotype accommodation as an expression of immigrants’ socio-cognitive adaptation", in Int. Journal of Intercultural Relations, vol. 72, pp. 76-86, 2019
@article{stanciu2019_1735106462029, author = "Stanciu, A. and Vauclair, C.-M. and Rodda, N.", title = "Evidence for stereotype accommodation as an expression of immigrants’ socio-cognitive adaptation", journal = "International Journal of Intercultural Relations", year = "2019", volume = "72", number = "", doi = "10.1016/j.ijintrel.2019.07.003", pages = "76-86", url = "https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/international-journal-of-intercultural-relations" }
TY - JOUR TI - Evidence for stereotype accommodation as an expression of immigrants’ socio-cognitive adaptation T2 - International Journal of Intercultural Relations VL - 72 AU - Stanciu, A. AU - Vauclair, C.-M. AU - Rodda, N. PY - 2019 SP - 76-86 SN - 0147-1767 DO - 10.1016/j.ijintrel.2019.07.003 UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/international-journal-of-intercultural-relations AB - Through intercultural contact, immigrants can change the stereotypes they had previously held about the majority ethnic group in their host cultures. Other undocumented processes of socio-cognitive adaptation following migration are also possible; immigrants’ preexisting stereotypes about social groups (e.g., politicians, older people), for example, may change because of host-cultural learning. This article examines the stereotype accommodation hypothesis, which states that differences in cultural stereotypes between immigrants’ host and origin cultures are a source of inconsistent stereotype-relevant information that immigrants may or may not incorporate into their preexisting beliefs. Support for this hypothesis is found in two studies of locals in Romania, Germany, and France (N = 532), and Romanian immigrants in Germany and in France (N = 225). Length of stay in the host culture and acculturation orientation predict the stereotype accommodation regarding politicians, the only social group for which stereotypes substantially differ between origin and host cultures. The results represent the first step in a research agenda for studying migrants’ socio-cognitive adaptation beyond the question of inter-ethnic stereotype change. The article thus discusses future avenues for the study of behavior and discrimination from the perspective of immigrants as agentic individuals. ER -