想象中的退出是一种声音:奥巴马和特朗普治下美国人的移民愿望

IF 2.3 1区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Helen B. Marrow, Amanda Klekowski von Koppenfels
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章探讨了政治因素是否是美国出生公民移民愿望的基础,如果是的话,政治因素又是如何影响美国出生公民的移民愿望的--美国出生公民通常被认为拥有特权和选择权,可以出于经济或社会/文化/生活方式等多种原因 "自愿 "迁移到其他地方,而不是被战争、革命或暴力等政治因素驱逐出去。我们利用一个独特的、具有全国代表性的小组,在2014年和2019年对1764名美国出生的公民进行了调查,尽管许多媒体提出了相反的观点,但我们表明,在这一动荡时期,美国人移民愿望的总体普遍性和分布实际上保持稳定。尽管如此,我们还是发现了一些证据,表明政治因素确实影响着美国出生的公民所表达的愿望,较弱的民族归属感和自由主义政治意识形态都会持续提高他们的几率,而政治参与则会根据小组成员的意识形态归属和具体的执政制度而朝着不同的方向发展。我们将讨论这些发现对有关全球北方移民愿望的文献、移民的多因理论以及赫希曼的经典概念--忠诚、发言权和退出--之间关系的意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Imagined Exit as Voice: Americans’ Emigration Aspirations Under Obama and Trump
This article interrogates whether, and if so how, political factors underlie the migration aspirations of US-born citizens—a group of people often assumed to have the privilege and options to relocate elsewhere, typically “voluntarily” and for a mix of economic or social/cultural/lifestyle reasons, rather than being pushed out politically by war, revolution, or violence. Drawing on a unique, nationally-representative panel of 1,764 US-born citizens surveyed in 2014 and 2019, and despite many media suggesting the contrary, we show that the overall prevalence and distribution of Americans’ migration aspirations period actually stayed stable during this volatile time period. Nevertheless, we do uncover evidence that political considerations do shape what aspirations US-born citizens do express, with both weaker national attachment and liberal political ideology consistently raising their odds, and political engagement operating in different directions, depending on panelists’ ideological affiliations and the specific governing regime. We discuss the relevance of these findings for literature on migration aspirations from the Global North, multicausal theories of migration, and the relationship between Hirschman’s classic concepts of loyalty, voice, and exit.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
7.90%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: International Migration Review is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal created to encourage and facilitate the study of all aspects of sociodemographic, historical, economic, political, legislative and international migration. It is internationally regarded as the principal journal in the field facilitating study of international migration, ethnic group relations, and refugee movements. Through an interdisciplinary approach and from an international perspective, IMR provides the single most comprehensive forum devoted exclusively to the analysis and review of international population movements.
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