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Communication Research
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Communicating Social Identity

A Study of Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland

Owen Hargie

University of Ulster

David Dickson

University of Ulster

John Mallett

University of Ulster

Maurice Stringer

University of Ulster

This article examined communicative aspects of social identity theory in the context of the deeply divided community of Northern Ireland. Self-disclosure was selected for analysis, given its central role in the development of cross-group friendships and related reduction of negative bias towards the outgroup. In view of previous research on factors that mediate the decision to self-disclose to the outgroup, and using the Disclosure Decision Model as a guiding framework, the authors hypothesized that outgroup contact would be a key determinant of disclosure but that contact would be mediated by degree of trust and attraction for the outgroup, as well as by strength of ingroup identification. The findings supported these predictions. The results are discussed both in relation to the importance of communication facets of social identity theory and in light of wider policy implications for cross-group communication in Northern Ireland.

Key Words: social identity • intergroup communication • self-disclosure • trust • attraction

This version was published on December 1, 2008

Communication Research, Vol. 35, No. 6, 792-821 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0093650208324270


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