Cross-Ethnic Self-Disclosure Buffering Negative Impacts of Prejudice on International Students' Psychological and Social Well-Being

Intergroup contact theory suggests that developing a close relationship with outgroup members ameliorates the negative impact of prejudice that individuals perceive from outgroup members. This article specifically investigates the moderating role of cross-ethnic self-disclosure in the link between i...

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Main Authors: Tatsuya Imai, Ayako Imai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of International Students 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of International Students
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ojed.org/index.php/jis/article/view/279
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spelling doaj-302b94cd7930452f97de6b78c05c852d2020-11-25T03:33:16ZengJournal of International StudentsJournal of International Students2162-31042166-37502019-01-0191668310.32674/jis.v9i1.279279Cross-Ethnic Self-Disclosure Buffering Negative Impacts of Prejudice on International Students' Psychological and Social Well-BeingTatsuya Imai0Ayako Imai1Nanzan UniversityNanzan UniversityIntergroup contact theory suggests that developing a close relationship with outgroup members ameliorates the negative impact of prejudice that individuals perceive from outgroup members. This article specifically investigates the moderating role of cross-ethnic self-disclosure in the link between international students’ perceived ethnic/racial prejudice and depression as well as loneliness. One hundred and forty-three international students in Japan were asked to rate their perceived prejudice, depression, and loneliness as well as their self-disclosure to host nationals. The results showed that self-disclosure buffers the negative effects of prejudice on depression and loneliness such that international students who were more likely to disclose themselves to host nationals were less likely to be influenced by prejudice. Theoretical and practical contributions are considered.https://www.ojed.org/index.php/jis/article/view/279depressionlonelinessprejudiceself-disclosurepersonalization model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tatsuya Imai
Ayako Imai
spellingShingle Tatsuya Imai
Ayako Imai
Cross-Ethnic Self-Disclosure Buffering Negative Impacts of Prejudice on International Students' Psychological and Social Well-Being
Journal of International Students
depression
loneliness
prejudice
self-disclosure
personalization model
author_facet Tatsuya Imai
Ayako Imai
author_sort Tatsuya Imai
title Cross-Ethnic Self-Disclosure Buffering Negative Impacts of Prejudice on International Students' Psychological and Social Well-Being
title_short Cross-Ethnic Self-Disclosure Buffering Negative Impacts of Prejudice on International Students' Psychological and Social Well-Being
title_full Cross-Ethnic Self-Disclosure Buffering Negative Impacts of Prejudice on International Students' Psychological and Social Well-Being
title_fullStr Cross-Ethnic Self-Disclosure Buffering Negative Impacts of Prejudice on International Students' Psychological and Social Well-Being
title_full_unstemmed Cross-Ethnic Self-Disclosure Buffering Negative Impacts of Prejudice on International Students' Psychological and Social Well-Being
title_sort cross-ethnic self-disclosure buffering negative impacts of prejudice on international students' psychological and social well-being
publisher Journal of International Students
series Journal of International Students
issn 2162-3104
2166-3750
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Intergroup contact theory suggests that developing a close relationship with outgroup members ameliorates the negative impact of prejudice that individuals perceive from outgroup members. This article specifically investigates the moderating role of cross-ethnic self-disclosure in the link between international students’ perceived ethnic/racial prejudice and depression as well as loneliness. One hundred and forty-three international students in Japan were asked to rate their perceived prejudice, depression, and loneliness as well as their self-disclosure to host nationals. The results showed that self-disclosure buffers the negative effects of prejudice on depression and loneliness such that international students who were more likely to disclose themselves to host nationals were less likely to be influenced by prejudice. Theoretical and practical contributions are considered.
topic depression
loneliness
prejudice
self-disclosure
personalization model
url https://www.ojed.org/index.php/jis/article/view/279
work_keys_str_mv AT tatsuyaimai crossethnicselfdisclosurebufferingnegativeimpactsofprejudiceoninternationalstudentspsychologicalandsocialwellbeing
AT ayakoimai crossethnicselfdisclosurebufferingnegativeimpactsofprejudiceoninternationalstudentspsychologicalandsocialwellbeing
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