Beyers Naudé, The Afrikaner and Race Relations (Johannesburg, South African Institute of Race Relations, 1968).
2.
Ibid., p. 9.
3.
Of course, the assertion of a general relationship between urbanization and a declining prejudice has been suggested by many other writers, for example, see B. Bettelheim and M. Janowitz, Social Change and Prejudice (New York, Free Press of Glencoe, 1950), p. 82, and
4.
E.J.B. Rose and associates, Colour and Citizenship: A Report on British Race Relations (London, Oxford University Press, for Institute of Race Relations, 1969), Chapter 28.
5.
A.M. Rose, 'The Causes of Prejudice', in M. L. Barron (ed.), American Minorities ( New York, Knopf, 1957), p. 85.
6.
L. Kish , 'A Procedure for Objective Respondent Selection within the Household', Journal of the American Statistical Association (Vol. 44, 1949), pp. 380-7.
7.
R. Likert , 'A Technique for the Measurement of Attitudes' , Archives of Psychology (No. 140, 1932).
8.
H. Lever , L. Schlemmer and O.J. M. Wagner, 'A Factor Analysis of Authoritarian-ism', Journal for Social Research (South African) (Vol. XVI, 1968), pp. 41-8.
9.
T.W. Adorno et al., The Authoritarian Personality (New York, Harper, 1950 ).
10.
H. Lever and O.J.M. Wagner, 'A Factor Analysis of Anomie', Journal for Social Research (South African) (Vol. XVI, 1967), pp. 1-6.
11.
L. Srole , 'Social Integration and Certain Corollaries: An Exploratory Study', American Sociological Review (Vol. XXI, 1956), pp. 709-16.
12.
I.D. MacCrone , Race Attitudes in South Africa ( London, Oxford University Press, 1937), p. 212,
13.
and 'The Functional Analysis of a Group Attitude towards the Native', South African Journal of Science (Vol. XXX, 1933), pp. 687-9;
14.
and H. Lever,Ethnic Attitudes of Johannesburg Youth (Johannesburg , Witwatersrand University Press, 1968), p. 179.
15.
L. Marquard , The Peoples and Policies of South Africa (London, Oxford University Press, 1960), p. 70.