Replication data for: The Hidden American Immigration Consensus: A Conjoint Analysis of Attitudes toward Immigrants
Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)
View Archive InfoField | Value | |
Title |
Replication data for: The Hidden American Immigration Consensus: A Conjoint Analysis of Attitudes toward Immigrants
|
|
Identifier |
https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/25505
|
|
Creator |
Hainmueller, Jens
|
|
Publisher |
Harvard Dataverse
|
|
Description |
Many studies have examined Americans' immigration attitudes. Yet prior research frequently confounds multiple questions, including which immigrants to admit and how many to admit. To isolate attitudes on the former question, we use a conjoint experiment which simultaneously tests the influence of nine immigrant attributes in generating support for admission. Drawing on a two-wave, population-based survey, we demonstrate that Americans view educated immigrants in high-status jobs favorably, while they view those who lack plans to work, entered without authorization, are Iraqi, or do not speak English unfavorably. Strikingly, Americans' preferences vary little with their own education, partisanship, labor market position, ethnocentrism, or other attributes. Beneath partisan divisions over immigration lies a hidden consensus about which immigrants to admit. The results are consistent with norms-based and sociotropic explanations of immigration attitudes. This consensus points to limits in both theories emphasizing economic and cultural threats, and sheds new light on an ongoing policy debate.
|
|
Subject |
Social Sciences
Immigration Survey experiment Conjoint |
|
Contributor |
Hainmueller, Jens
|
|
Type |
survey
|
|