Seeing racial avoidance on New York City streets

Dietrich, B. J. & Sands, M.ORCID logo (2023). Seeing racial avoidance on New York City streets. Nature Human Behaviour, 7(8), 1275 – 1281. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-023-01589-7
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Here, using publicly available traffic camera feeds in combination with a real-world field experiment, we examine how pedestrians of different races behave in the presence of racial out-group members. Across two different New York City neighbourhoods and 3,552 pedestrians, we generate an unobtrusive, large-scale measure of inter-group racial avoidance by measuring the distance individuals maintain between themselves and other racial groups. We find that, on average, pedestrians in our sample (93% of whom were phenotypically non-Black) give a wider berth to Black confederates, as compared with white non-Hispanic confederates.

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