Attitudes toward immigration and refugee policy

A global study

Authors

  • Prof. Dr. Sara McCarty Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama, USA
  • Assoc. Prof. Dr. Rachel Hagues Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama, USA
  • Prof. Dr. Jonathan Davis Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama, USA

Keywords:

immigration, policy, attitudes, refugees, Gallup

Abstract

In recent years, several high-profile refugee crises highlighted the varied approaches and attitudes toward refugees both within and across countries. The ongoing Syrian refugee crisis due to the Syrian civil war, the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 each led millions of those countries’ residents to seek asylum worldwide. Individuals’ attitudes toward “outsiders” vary across countries, people groups, and often by individual characteristics. Individuals hold a range of knowledge and views about immigrants and refugees and the different reasons they migrate. In this study, we combine Gallup World Poll Data with United Nations refugee data to explore the relationship between attitudes toward immigrants and the number of refugees in a country relative to the population. We focus on a subset of countries available in the Gallup data which host or are geographically close to the majority of the world’s refugees. We posit that the number of refugees in a country, relative to the population, correlates with attitudes toward immigrants in the individual’s area. Using ordinary least squares regression and the Gallup-provided survey weights, we find that there is a negative correlation between the relative number of refugees in a country and individuals’ reports that their area is a good place for immigrants. The negative correlation remains even with an extensive set of control variables. This suggests that a higher number of refugees within a country correlate with diminished views that the respondent’s area is a good place for immigrants. While the sign of the coefficient is consistently negative, the size of the coefficient is tiny. Thus, while policymakers and leaders ought to be aware of this negative correlation, it does not appear to be a primary correlate with attitudes toward immigrants.

Author Biographies

Prof. Dr. Sara McCarty, Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama, USA

Sara McCarty is a professor of economics in the Department of Economics, Finance, and Quantitative Analysis in the Brock School of Business at Samford University, Birmingham, U.S.A.

Assoc. Prof. Dr. Rachel Hagues, Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama, USA

Rachel Hagues is an associate professor in the Department of Social Work in the College of Health Sciences at Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.A.

Prof. Dr. Jonathan Davis, Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama, USA

Jonathan Davis is a professor of Human Development and Family Science in the Orlean Beeson School of Education at Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama, U.S.A.

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Published

09/20/2022

How to Cite

McCarty, S., Hagues, R., & Davis, J. (2022). Attitudes toward immigration and refugee policy: A global study. Quarterly on Refugee Problems - AWR Bulletin, 61(1), 20–39. Retrieved from https://ejournals.bibliothek.thws.de/qrp/article/view/31

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