Increasing Immigrant Inclusion: Family History, Empathy, and Immigration in the United States

Scott Williamson, Claire L. Adida, Adeline Lo, Melina R. Platas, Lauren Prather, Seth H. Werfel
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Immigration is a highly polarized issue in the United States, and negative attitudes toward immigrants are common. Yet, almost all Americans are descended from people who originated outside the United States. Can this common history overcome the intense polarization that migration policy elicits? In this paper, we draw from recent studies showing that perspective taking decreases prejudice toward out-groups to investigate whether priming Americans on their own immigration history induces more support for immigrants and immigration. We test this hypothesis with three separate survey experiments conducted over the past two years. Our findings show that priming family history - a light touch intervention - generates small but consistent inclusionary effects on attitudes toward immigrants and immigration policy. These effects are immediate, and occur even among partisan subgroups and Americans who approve of President Trump. Furthermore, we provide evidence that increased empathy for immigrants constitutes the mechanism driving these effects. Our consistent results contribute to growing experimental literature on prejudice reduction and migration by suggesting an important role for empathy in shifting attitudes toward immigration.
增加移民包容:家族史、移情和美国的移民
移民在美国是一个高度两极化的问题,对移民的负面态度很普遍。然而,几乎所有的美国人都是美国以外的人的后裔。这段共同的历史能克服移民政策引发的强烈两极分化吗?在本文中,我们从最近的研究中得出结论,表明视角会减少对外群体的偏见,以调查向美国人介绍他们自己的移民历史是否会导致对移民和移民的更多支持。我们在过去两年中进行了三次独立的调查实验来检验这一假设。我们的研究结果表明,启动家族史——一种轻触式干预——对对移民和移民政策的态度产生了微小但持续的包容性影响。这些影响是立竿见影的,甚至在党派小团体和支持特朗普总统的美国人中也会出现。此外,我们提供的证据表明,对移民移情的增加构成了驱动这些效应的机制。我们一致的结果通过表明移情在改变对移民的态度方面的重要作用,为减少偏见和移民的实验文献做出了贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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