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First published online January 29, 2015

Contact Theory in a Small-Town Settler-Colonial Context: The Reproduction of Laissez-Faire Racism in Indigenous-White Canadian Relations

Abstract

This article builds on group position theory and the subcategorization model of intergroup contact by illustrating how, in a small-town settler-colonial context, contact tends to reproduce, rather than challenge, the inequitable racial structure. In Northwestern Ontario, Indigenous-settler relations are characterized by widespread intergroup marriage and friendship as well as pervasive prejudice and discrimination. Using 18 months of fieldwork and 160 interviews and surveys with First Nations, Métis, and non-Indigenous residents, I show that although contact is associated with less “old-fashioned” prejudice (i.e., overt categorical hostility), it does not necessarily eliminate whites’ superior sense of group position. Even white individuals who have close Indigenous friends or spouses often express laissez-faire racism. Three mutually reinforcing social processes—subtyping, ideology-based homophily, and political avoidance norms—interact to sustain whites’ sense of group superiority and justifications for racial inequity. These processes are facilitated by historical and structural conditions, in this case colonization and small-town dynamics.

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Biographies

Jeffrey S. Denis is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at McMaster University. His research focuses on the dynamics of racism and colonialism, antiracist and Indigenous rights activism, social inequalities in health, and social movements. He is completing a book manuscript on Anishinaabe-settler relations in Northwestern Ontario, Canada.

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The Reproduction of Laissez-Faire Racism in Indigenous-White Canadian Relations

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Article first published online: January 29, 2015
Issue published: February 2015

Keywords

  1. contact
  2. prejudice
  3. racism
  4. group position
  5. settler-colonialism
  6. Indigenous
  7. Canada

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Jeffrey S. Denis
McMaster University

Notes

Jeffrey S. Denis, Department of Sociology, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, KTH-624, Hamilton, ON, L8S 4M4, Canada E-mail: [email protected]

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