Cui Bono? Partisanship and Attitudes Toward Refugees
Published online on January 25, 2021
Abstract
["Social Science Quarterly, Volume 102, Issue 1, Page 166-178, January 2021. ", "\n\nObjective\nThis paper tests the hypothesis that the expected partisan affiliation of refugee populations partially explains why white conservatives and white liberals have different attitudes toward refugee resettlement in the United States.\n\n\nMethod\nThis was tested with a preregistered survey experiment that examined how attitudes toward refugee resettlement changed depending on the racial and political characteristics of a theoretical refugee population.\n\n\nResults\nConservative opposition to refugee resettlement can be weakened if conservatives are given reasons to believe those refugees will support the Republican Party. At the same time, liberal support for refugees drops when they receive the same information.\n\n\nConclusion\nAlthough white conservatives and white liberals exhibit different levels of racial prejudice, and this has consequences for their immigration and refugee policy preferences, their beliefs about how newcomers influence domestic partisan politics are also consequential.\n\n"]