Attitudes toward interracial marriages and the role of interracial contacts in SwedenPosted in Articles, Europe, Media Archive, Social Science on 2016-11-23 21:29Z by Steven |
Attitudes toward interracial marriages and the role of interracial contacts in Sweden
Ethnicities
Volume 16, Number 4, August 2016
pages 568-588
DOI: 10.1177/1468796816638400
Sayaka Osanami Törngren
Malmo University, Sweden; Sophia University, Japan
This paper examines attitudes toward interracial marriages and the relationship between the amount of prior interracial contact and attitudes in Sweden. The analysis is based on an anonymous postal survey conducted in Malmö, Sweden answered by 461 white-European respondents. Several studies in the US address the question of contact and attitudes and find that those who have more interracial contact, especially interracial friendships, have more positive attitudes toward intermarriage. The results show that the majority of the white European respondents can imagine marrying interracially; however, there are clear preferences toward different racial groups. Moreover, as in the US context, respondents who reported interracial friendships, and not general or superficial contacts, are more apt to answer the question about interracial marriage positively.
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