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Journal of Language and Social Psychology, Vol. 26, No. 2, 157-181 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0261927X07300078
© 2007 SAGE Publications

Intergroup Contact and Minority-Language Education

Reducing Language-Based Discrimination and Its Negative Impact

Stephen C. Wright

Simon Fraser University

Évelyne Bougie

Simon Fraser University

The authors consider two related approaches that may be important in the amelioration of language-based discrimination. The first focuses on the attitudes of the dominant-language group and applies recent perspectives on the intergroup contact theory to suggest ways of reducing prejudice among members of the dominant group. Research with White/Anglo children in California are used to show the potential benefits of bilingual over English-only education in this regard. The second approach focuses on the psychology of the minority-language group. Supported by research with Inuit children in Arctic Quebec, the authors describe how heritage-language education can have a positive impact on personal and social identity, support heritage-language development, facilitate second-language acquisition, and perhaps buffer the negative impact of discrimination on self-esteem and well-being by supporting the development of strong ingroup identification.

Key Words: language discrimination • bilingual and heritage-language education • intergroup contact • identity


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