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Ethnic hostility is contagious: Czech-Slovak study

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Prague, Czech Republic
Fri, May 25, 2018

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Ethnic hostility is contagious: Czech-Slovak study 'Social norms regulating anti-social behavior are very fragile if this behavior is aimed at ethnic minorities,' researchers Michal Bauer and Julie Chytilova told AFP on Wednesday. (Shutterstock/File)

H

ostility towards ethnic minorities is contagious and the acceptability of destructive behavior towards them can easily change depending on how others behave, according to a new study by a Czech-Slovak team.

"Social norms regulating anti-social behavior are very fragile if this behavior is aimed at ethnic minorities," researchers Michal Bauer and Julie Chytilova told AFP on Wednesday.

The study by the CERGE-EI Institute at Prague's Charles University, the Munich-based Max Planck Institute and the Technical University in Kosice, Slovakia was conducted in eastern Slovakia, a district with a large Roma ethnic minority, in 2013.

Published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA in April, the study was based on a game in which the players -- 327 school children from the majority ethnic Slovak population aged 13-15 -- first received two euros ($2.34) each.

Then they had to decide whether to pay 0.2 euros to reduce their rival's funds by half -- a "destructive" choice -- or whether to keep the payoffs unchanged.

Next, in groups of three, they played against potential rivals represented by a list of 20 typical Slovak majority or Roma minority names, with all three players making their choice one after another.

"We tested the hypothesis that susceptibility to follow peers becomes magnified when harm is done to ethnic outgroup members compared with coethnics," reads the study. 

Read also: EDITORIAL: Strangers of the same race

'Fragile social norms' 

The results were "striking" -- the study pointed out a significant influence of peers in decision-making on doing harm to the minority.

If the first child to choose was "peaceful" towards the minority, only 19 percent of the second decision-makers were hostile.

But a total of 77 percent of second decision-makers showed hostility if the first child to choose had been hostile.

Among the third decision-makers, only 18 percent were destructive if one or both their predecessors were peaceful, but 88 percent were destructive if the previous two showed hostility.

Besides, "the participants saw hateful behavior towards the Roma as more socially acceptable if somebody else treated the Roma with hate," said Bauer and Chytilova.

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