Ethnic Diversity and Social Trust: Evidence from the Micro-Context

Peter Thisted Dinesen, Kim Mannemar Sønderskov

    125 Citations (Scopus)
    20704 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    We argue that residential exposure to ethnic diversity reduces social trust. Previous within-country analyses of the relationship between contextual ethnic diversity and trust have been conducted at higher levels of aggregation, thus ignoring substantial variation in actual exposure to ethnic diversity. In contrast, we analyze how ethnic diversity of the immediate micro-context—where interethnic exposure is inevitable—affects trust. We do this using Danish survey data linked with register-based data, which enables us to obtain precise measures of the ethnic diversity of each individual’s residential surroundings. We focus on contextual diversity within a radius of 80 meters of a given individual, but we also compare the effect in the micro-context to the impact of diversity in more aggregate contexts. Our results show that ethnic diversity in the micro-context affects trust negatively, whereas the effect vanishes in larger contextual units. This supports the conjecture that interethnic exposure underlies the negative relationship between ethnic diversity in residential contexts and social trust.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalAmerican Sociological Review
    Volume80
    Issue number3
    Pages (from-to)550-573
    ISSN0003-1224
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 9 Jun 2015

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