投票,脱颖而出:公众对移民政治地位的反应

IF 5 1区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Stephanie Zonszein, Guy Grossman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

优势群体的本地人对移民的政治融合有何反应?我们认为,少数民族移民赢得政治职位,使当地人感到威胁,引发仇恨。我们在2010-2019年英国大选期间测试了这一动态,使用了仇恨犯罪警察记录、公众舆论数据以及来自50多万份地区和地方报纸文章的文本数据。虽然过去的工作没有在少数民族的政治权力获得和主导群体的敌意之间建立因果关系,但我们通过回归不连续设计来识别当地人的敌对反应,该设计利用了移民出身的少数民族和主导群体候选人之间接近的选举结果。我们发现,少数族裔的胜利使仇恨犯罪增加67%,排外态度增加66%,媒体对移民群体的负面报道增加110%。与权力威胁和社会认同理论一致,这些发现表明了一种强烈而广泛的负面反应——包括暴力倾向的边缘群体和大众——反对少数族裔移民融入多数群体。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Voted in, standing out: Public response to immigrants' political accession

Voted in, standing out: Public response to immigrants' political accession

How do dominant-group natives react to immigrants' political integration? We argue that ethnic minority immigrants winning political office makes natives feel threatened, triggering animosity. We test this dynamic across the 2010–2019 UK general elections, using hate crime police records, public opinion data, and text data from over 500,000 regional and local newspaper articles. While past work has not established a causal relationship between minorities' political power gains and dominant-group animosity, we identify natives' hostile reactions with a regression discontinuity design that leverages close election results between immigrant-origin ethnic minority and dominant-group candidates. We find that minority victories increase hate crimes by 67%, exclusionary attitudes by 66%, and negative media coverage of immigrant groups by 110%. Consistent with power threat and social identity theories, these findings demonstrate a strong and widespread negative reaction—encompassing a violence-prone fringe and the mass public—against ethnic minority immigrants' integration into majority settings.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
2.40%
发文量
61
期刊介绍: The American Journal of Political Science (AJPS) publishes research in all major areas of political science including American politics, public policy, international relations, comparative politics, political methodology, and political theory. Founded in 1956, the AJPS publishes articles that make outstanding contributions to scholarly knowledge about notable theoretical concerns, puzzles or controversies in any subfield of political science.
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