TY - JOUR
T1 - Geo-Political Rivalry and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment
T2 - A Conjoint Experiment in 22 Countries
AU - Wimmer, Andreas
AU - Bonikowski, B. A.R.T.
AU - Crabtree, Charles
AU - Fu, Z. H.E.N.G.
AU - Golder, Matthew
AU - Tsutsui, Kiyoteru
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of American Political Science Association.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Introducing an international relations perspective into the literature on anti-immigrant attitudes, we hypothesize that immigrants from rival countries will be shunned and immigrants from allied countries preferred, especially by respondents who identify more strongly with the nation. We fielded a forced-choice conjoint experiment in 22 countries, whereby respondents chose between applicants for permanent resident status with randomized attributes. We identified rival and allied countries of origin for each surveyed country, with one such pair sharing a similar racial and cultural make-up as the majority of respondents, and one pair being more dissimilar. We find that discrimination against immigrants from rival states is so pronounced that it results in a net preference for racially and culturally dissimilar immigrants. Since we fielded the surveys amidst the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we are able to leverage exogenous changes in the intensity of one rivalry, providing further evidence for the proposed mechanism.
AB - Introducing an international relations perspective into the literature on anti-immigrant attitudes, we hypothesize that immigrants from rival countries will be shunned and immigrants from allied countries preferred, especially by respondents who identify more strongly with the nation. We fielded a forced-choice conjoint experiment in 22 countries, whereby respondents chose between applicants for permanent resident status with randomized attributes. We identified rival and allied countries of origin for each surveyed country, with one such pair sharing a similar racial and cultural make-up as the majority of respondents, and one pair being more dissimilar. We find that discrimination against immigrants from rival states is so pronounced that it results in a net preference for racially and culturally dissimilar immigrants. Since we fielded the surveys amidst the Russian invasion of Ukraine, we are able to leverage exogenous changes in the intensity of one rivalry, providing further evidence for the proposed mechanism.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0003055424000753
DO - 10.1017/S0003055424000753
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85200898217
SN - 0003-0554
JO - American Political Science Review
JF - American Political Science Review
ER -