Ethnic Diversity and Social Trust: A Narrative and Meta-Anlytical Review
We find a statistically significant negative relationship between ethnic diversity and social trust across all studies
Does ethnic diversity erode social trust? Continued immigration and corresponding growing ethnic diversity have prompted this essential question for modern societies, but few clear answers have been reached in the sprawling literature. This article reviews the literature on the relationship between ethnic diversity and social trust through a narrative review and a meta-analysis of 1,001 estimates from 87 studies. The review clarifies the core concepts, highlights pertinent debates, and tests core claims from the literature on the relationship between ethnic diversity and social trust. Several results stand out from the meta-analysis. We find a statistically significant negative relationship between ethnic diversity and social trust across all studies. The relationship is stronger for trust in neighbors and when ethnic diversity is measured more locally. Covariate conditioning generally changes the relationship only slightly. The review concludes by discussing avenues for future research.
https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-polisci-052918-020708
ht/t Paul Joseph Watson video references study (8 mins in)
https://youtu.be/5RZpVUFIxww?t=480