Group Positions Beyond the Binary: The Determinants of Immigration Attitudes Among Black, Hispanic, and White Americans

Q2 Social Sciences Sociological Focus Pub Date : 2023-08-07 DOI:10.1080/00380237.2023.2239734
Randall R. Wyatt, D. Merolla
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Research on racial policy attitudes has primarily focused on the attitudes of black and white Americans. However, given the shifting racial landscape in the United States, it is important to understand how other racial groups view important social issues. Using Blumer’s group positions model, this research seeks to determine the predictors of five immigration attitudes among white, black, and both U.S. and foreign-born Hispanic Americans. Results using data from the 2004 and 2008 National Politics Study show that black, white, and U.S.-born Hispanic Americans display more anti-immigration attitudes than foreign-born Hispanics, with Black and White Americans showing the most anti-immigrant attitudes. Further, results show that whereas individual economic threat has a similar effect on immigration attitudes for Americans of all racial backgrounds, whites’ attitudes are also shaped by group-based economic and political threat and racial affect. These findings indicate that whites’ unique position as the dominant economic and political group in the United States makes their immigration attitudes uniquely sensitive to group-based threats to their dominant position.
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二元之外的群体立场:美国黑人、西班牙裔和白人移民态度的决定因素
摘要对种族政策态度的研究主要集中在美国黑人和白人的态度上。然而,鉴于美国种族格局的变化,了解其他种族群体如何看待重要的社会问题是很重要的。利用布鲁默的群体立场模型,本研究试图确定白人、黑人以及美国和外国出生的西班牙裔美国人的五种移民态度的预测因素。使用2004年和2008年国家政治研究数据的结果显示,黑人、白人和美国出生的西班牙裔美国人比外国出生的西班牙裔美国人表现出更多的反移民态度,其中黑人和白人美国人表现出最反移民的态度。此外,研究结果表明,尽管个人经济威胁对所有种族背景的美国人的移民态度都有类似的影响,但白人的态度也受到基于群体的经济和政治威胁以及种族影响的影响。这些发现表明,白人作为美国占主导地位的经济和政治群体的独特地位,使他们的移民态度对基于群体的对其主导地位的威胁特别敏感。
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来源期刊
Sociological Focus
Sociological Focus Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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