6533b85cfe1ef96bd12bcb7e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

How shall we all live together?: Meta‐analytical review of the mutual intercultural relations in plural societies project

John W. BerryZarina LepshokovaDmitry GrigoryevRobert C. AnnisAlgae K. Y. AuShabana BanoKlaus BoehnkeAlois BuholzerAsteria BrylkaSylvia Xiaohua ChenJustine DandyKevin DunnMarieke Van EgmondVictoria GalyapinaRyan GibsonHector GradYongxia GuiKatja HankeInga Jasinskaja‐lahtiJüri KruusvallAndrea Haenni HotiSybille HeinzmannBryant P. H. HuiCristiano IngugliaJolanda JettenLarissa Kus‐harbordRoland KünzleMary Anne LauriNadezhda LebedevaAlida Lo CocoMarianna MakarovaRamesh C MishraFrosso Motti‐stefanidiPasquale MussoFélix NetoJoana NetoYin ParadiesVassilis PavlopoulosMaaris RaudseppTuuli Anna RenvikLena RobinsonAnette RohmannTatiana RyabichenkoSaba SafdarDavid L. SamGordon SammutAlexander TatarkoR. C. TripathiAune ValkRaivo VetikTahereh Ziaian

subject

media_common.quotation_subjectintegrationadaptationmulticulturalismAcculturationEpistemologySettore M-PSI/04 - Psicologia Dello Sviluppo E Psicologia Dell'EducazioneIntercultural relationsArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)intercultural relationsMulticulturalismCultural diversityDevelopmental and Educational Psychologyintergroup contactSociologycultural diversityAdaptation (computer science)acculturationSettore M-PSI/05 - Psicologia SocialeApplied PsychologyPluralmedia_common

description

Living together in culturally plural societies poses numerous challenges for members of ethnocultural groups and for the larger society. An important goal of these societies is to achieve positive intercultural relations among all their peoples. Successful management of these relations depends on many factors including a research-based understanding of the historical, political, economic, religious and psychological features of the groups that are in contact. The core question is ‘how we shall we all live together?’ In the project reported in this paper (Mutual Intercultural Relations in Plural Societies; MIRIPS), we seek to provide such research by reviewing three core psychological hypotheses of intercultural relations (multiculturalism, contact and integration) in 21 culturally plural societies. The main goal of the project is to evaluate these hypotheses across societies within the MIRIPS project in order to identify if there are some basic psychological principles that underlie intercultural relations panculturally. If there are, the eventual goal is to employ the findings to propose some policies and programmes that may improve the quality of intercultural relationship globally. An internal meta-analysis using the MIRIPS project data showed that the empirical findings from these societies generally support the validity of the three hypotheses. Implications for the development of policies and programmes to enhance the quality of intercultural relations are discussed.

https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7595631