Different Effects on Different Immigrant Groups: Testing the Media’s Role in Triggering Perceptions of Economic, Cultural, and Security Threats From Immigration

Authors

  • Nora Theorin University of Gothenburg

Keywords:

news consumption, immigration, comparative research, panel survey, threat perceptions, intergroup threat theory

Abstract

Immigration has become increasingly politicized in Europe, and many countries have implemented more restrictive immigration policies. An important driver of this development is perceptions that immigration constitutes a threat toward the host country—perceptions potentially triggered by the media. The purpose of this study is to investigate (a) how news consumption influences different perceptions of threat from immigration from different regions, and (b) whether potential effects are robust across countries. Among other things, the results from a panel survey (N = 6,428) conducted in six European countries—Germany, Hungary, Poland, Spain, Sweden, and the UK—suggest that news consumption is more powerful in triggering perceived threats about non-European immigration than European immigration. However, the effects vary across countries, implying that such things as universal effects of news consumption do not exist.

Author Biography

Nora Theorin, University of Gothenburg

Nora Theorin (PhD, University of Gothenburg) works at the Department of Political Science, University of Gothenburg.Corresponding author: Nora Theorinnora.theorin@gu.seDepartment of Political ScienceUniversity of GothenburgDepartment of Political ScienceSprängkullsgatan 19Box 71140530 GöteborgDepartment of Political ScienceSprängkullsgatan 19Box 71140530 GöteborgORCiD: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5358-149X  The manuscript has been professionally proofread by Proof-Reading-Service.com.

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Published

2022-04-24

Issue

Section

Articles