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Economic and Cultural Drivers of Immigrant Support Worldwide
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 November 2017
Abstract
Employing a comparative experimental design drawing on over 18,000 interviews across eleven countries on four continents, this article revisits the discussion about the economic and cultural drivers of attitudes towards immigrants in advanced democracies. Experiments manipulate the occupational status, skin tone and national origin of immigrants in short vignettes. The results are most consistent with a Sociotropic Economic Threat thesis: In all countries, higher-skilled immigrants are preferred to their lower-skilled counterparts at all levels of native socio-economic status (SES). There is little support for the Labor Market Competition hypothesis, since respondents are not more opposed to immigrants in their own SES stratum. While skin tone itself has little effect in any country, immigrants from Muslim-majority countries do elicit significantly lower levels of support, and racial animus remains a powerful force.
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Footnotes
Political Science, University of Michigan (email: [email protected]); Communication Studies and Political Science, University of Michigan (email: [email protected]); Political Science, Stanford University (email: [email protected]); Sociology and Political Science, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (email: [email protected]); Nuffield College, University of Oxford (email: [email protected]); Institute of Public Goods and Policies, Spanish Scientific Research Institute (email: [email protected]); Communication, Seoul National University (email: [email protected]); Political Science, University of Copenhagen (email: [email protected]); Political Science, Université du Québec à Montréal (email: [email protected]); Political Science, University of Bamberg (email: [email protected]); United States Studies Centre, University of Sydney (email: [email protected]); Department of Media and Communication, City University of Hong Kong (email: [email protected]). Replication data sets are available in Harvard Dataverse at: https://dx.doi.org/10.7910/DVN/R5MEKK and online appendices are available at https://doi.org/10.1017/S000712341700031X.
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